<span>The four parts of a city include the central business district, residential districts, commercial districts, and industrial districts. Different activities take place in each of these types of districts. The central business district often is called a city’s downtown area. Make sure to leave a like for my answer. Looking for five stars and thanks pls.</span>
During the latest ice age on Earth, huge, frozen glaciers of snow and ice slowly crept along the surface of the planet. These glaciers crushed and flattened many solid, rocky features on the land. This is an example of the _______ interacting with the _______. A. cryosphere; geosphere
Hey there!
Your answer is b. semantic encoding.
Semantic encoding is to remember something by relating it to the meaning of something rather than the actual sound or structure of it. He is relating her name, hope, to the feeling of hopefulness.
Chunking is breaking something up into smaller parts, long term potentiation is remembering by repetition, self-reference is relating something to yourself to remember it, and imagery is using mental pictures to remember.
Hope this helps!
Hello. This question is incomplete. The full question is:
"Dr. Parrett is a sports psychologist for a large Southern university. The provost and chancellor have asked him to examine the relationship between athletic performance and academic stress at the university. For example, is it the case that the most talented athletes experience the greatest concern over their grades? The provost and chancellor have made it clear to Dr. Parrett that they want a large amount of external validity in the study. He has valid and reliable measures of both athletic performance and academic stress. He knows that he does not have the time or the money to study the entire population of interest.
Imagine that Dr. Parrett wants to use a nonrepresentative sampling technique. Name the three types of nonprobability sampling and explain how each one could be used by Dr. Parrett."
Answer:
The four types of nonprobability sampling are convenience sampling, purposive sampling, quota sampling, and snowball sampling.
Explanation:
Convenience sampling: Allows a selection to be made of a small sample of the target population of the research. This sample is made up of individuals who are available and accessible to research and not through statistical criteria. Regarding the question above, Dr. Parrett can select the athletes he knows and who would like to participate in the research.
Purposive sampling: It allows the sample to be controlled whenever a certain manipulation is possible to generate expected and known results. In the case of the question above, Dr Parrett can search for specific athletes, with characteristics that will generate an expected result in the research.
Snowball sampling: Allows the individuals who make up the sample to invite other individuals to compose the sample, who in turn can invite other individuals. In the case of the question above, Dr. Parret can invite the athletes he wants and ask them to call friends to participate in the survey as well.
Sampling quota: Allows the individuals who will compose the sample to be selected due to their characteristics and qualities. Regarding the question above, Dr. Parrett could only summon athletes with high marks.
Answer:
ego
Explanation:
The ego is a concept that Freud included in his theory of psychonysis.
Accordingly, the ego is the part of the personality that mediates the demands of the id (psychic expression of our drives and desires), the superego and reality. In this sense, it not only prevents us from acting according to our basic impulses (created by it), but also works to achieve a balance with our moral and idealistic standards (created by the superego).