In a survey of nurses working in intensive care units, what percent of nurses had deliberately hastened a patient's death at least once?

A. 75 percent
B. 50 percent
C. 35 percent
D. 20 percent


Answer: D

Psychology

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A speaker at a lunch for owners of small businesses says to the audience, "Here's a story you can tell your wives.". This situation would be an example of

a. gender as a subject variable. b. large individual differences. c. androcentric bias. d. a confounding variable.

Psychology

Jaunita is a typical six-month-old. How is she most likely to regulate her emotions if she sees a scary object? a. She will look away from the object

b. She will make a sad face. c. She will stare back and try to frighten the object away. d. She will make no attempt to regulate her emotions.

Psychology

The main difference between the parallel forms and splitĀ¬-half techniques for assessing reliability is that

a. the parallel forms techniques involves testing participants on two separate occasions and the split half technique does not. b. items are arbitrarily divided for comparison in the parallel forms procedure but this is not true for the split half technique. c. a high positive correlation between scores reflects good reliability for the parallel forms procedure but a high negative correlation is indicative of good reliability for the split half procedure. d. split half correlations reflect stability whereas parallel forms correlations do not.

Psychology

Given what we know about classical conditioning and learning through association, sleep experts generally recommend

A. at least eight hours of sleep each night. B. using the bed for sleep and sex only. C. spending a bit of time thinking about sleep before going to bed. D. learning as much as possible about all of the various sleep disorders.

Psychology