A low-carbohydrate, high-fat diet

A) ?may initially produce weight loss.
B) ?is an attractive dieting choice for many people.
C) ?produces a lower dropout rate than some other programs.
D) ?may include any or all of these characteristics.


D

Psychology

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Young children often ask questions about why things are as they are, how things began, and what will happen in the future. This is a sign of

a. initiative. b. trust. c. autonomy. d. creativity.

Psychology

A teacher used prompting in order to get a student to pronounce written words correctly. When the student begins pronouncing the words correctly just by seeing them, the teacher begins to remove the prompts. The gradual removal of prompts while the behavior is occurring in the presence of the discriminative stimulus is called:

a. prompt withdrawal b. shaping c. fading d. reduction

Psychology

Russell is conducting a study that employs naturalistic observation of teenagers at a local shopping mall food court. He is observing their "flirting" behaviors, and hypothesizes that the better clothes a teenager wears,

the more likely he or she is to be flirted with. As he makes his observations, one of his research partners notices that he does not pay attention to the teenagers who have less "nice" clothing nearly as much as he does to those kids who have a lot of trendy, fashionable clothing. Russell is falling prey to which disadvantage of naturalistic observation? a. Blind bias b. Observer bias c. Hindsight bias d. Double-blind bias

Psychology

Harry Harlow's "surrogate mothers" experiments provided strong support for his prediction that attachments develop

A) independently of the primary food source. B) out of the infant's need for contact comfort. C) Both A and B are correct. D) Neither A nor B is correct.

Psychology