Answer:
D - Mental.
Explanation:
Determining that the driving risk is too high, be it for medical reasons (physical, physiological, mental, etc), is enough reason to strongly consider alternative transportation choices. Not only because the risk is for the driver, but for any other people out on the streets, passengers, other drivers, etc. Driving is no simple task, and should be taken with all the seriousness possible.
Answer:
The correct answer is: The goods produced at the second factory will be counted on Mexican GDP.
Explanation:
Gross Domestic Product is the most common measure of production of a country; it calculates the total output or goods produced <em>within</em> a certain country. This means that, even though a firm is located in one country (country A), the goods that are produced in another country (country B) will be counted as part of the foreign's country GDP (country B).
In this case, even though ArmiLiza is based on the US, the goods produced in Mexico are counted on mexican GDP.
<u>Based on the information, Dr. Germain's test</u> appears to have proved that high-school seniors' scores on the test and high scores in their freshman gpas one year later are two events that tend to happen together (75 out of every 100 times). This is the furthest conclusion that can be interpreted from a correlation coefficent.
<u>But correlation does not imply causality</u>, so he cannot predict with these results that those who got senior scores in high school will perform as good (and better than others) when they become freshmen.
Answer:
Investment theory of creativity
Explanation:
Researchers Robert Sternberg and Todd Lubart have proposed a theory called the <u>investment theory of creativity</u>. According to the authors, creative people are like good investors: they buy low and sell high. Their research show that creative ideas are rejected as bizarre or ridiculous by most people when they first come out, and thus they are worth little. Creative people are willing to champion these ideas that are not generally accepted, and it is in this sense that they are "buying low". They try hard to convince other people of the value of the new idea, and eventually they turn them into supported and high value ideas. Creative people "sell high" when they move on from the now generally accepted idea on to the next unpopular but promising idea.
A real world example of this theory was famous filmmaker Stanley Kubrick. When most of his movies first came out, they usually were met with mixed or negative reviews, as was the case of films like <em>A Clockwork Orange </em>(1971) or <em>The Shining </em>(1980). However, after a few years, they were widely recognized as cinematic masterpieces.
Answer:
The best course of action is to modify the elements of the research that were not approved by the IRB, even if this implies the removal of the subject who will be admitted to prison, or to talk to the penitentiary authorities if something can be done for the subject to participate in the research. and then report to the IRB.
Explanation:
All research carried out must be within the guidelines that the IRB proposes. For this reason, if a research is disapproved by the IRB, it must have factors modified and adapted so that it can be approved and carried out, even if this excludes the possibility of participation of volunteers who were interested in research and cannot due to some situation such as prisons, illnesses, among others.