The choices for the question are:
<span>a. MICR readers
b. RFID readers
c. SSDs
<span>d. OMRs
</span></span>OMRs input data from special forms to score or tally exams, questionnaires, ballots, and so forth. The answer to your question is D. I hope that this is the answer that you were looking for and it has helped you.
If Angie has amnesia and she remembers everything about her past but cannot retain memories of any new experiences for more than 10 to 15 minutes; the new memories just seem to “disappear” and she has to learn it all over again — her symptoms are most similar to someone with “anterograde amnesia”. Wherein new information from short-term store cannot be transferred into the long-term store.
1. The correct answer here is the first option.
Wilson was an idealist and he wanted to ensure the world peace after the end of the World War I, which up to that point was the bloodiest conflict in the human history. So he proposed a union called the League of Nations which would ensure integrity and independence of both big and small countries all around the world.
2.The correct answer would be the third option.
One of the "Fourteen Points", Point X states that the Austria-Hungary should be allowed greatest autonomy in advancing and ruling its own country. Wilson was an idealist and he wanted to ensure even Austria-Hungary's place among other nations. So the scenario outlined in option 3 would best fit "Fourteen Points".
Answer: the contestants and observers thought the questioners were more knowledgeable than the contestants.
Explanation: Ross et al published a paper in the journal of personality and social psychology in 1977 titled
"Social Roles, Social Control, and Biases in Social-Perception Processes". They demonstrated that our actions and perceptions are determined by roles we have to play in interpersonal encounters; this is the biasing effect social roles have on performance.
In this instance the observers and the contestants perceived the questioners as having superior knowledge as the questioners were given latitude in how they frame the questions. Due to their social roles, the questioners were "the powerful" while the contestants and observers were "the powerless" playing out their roles and not taking into account the biasing effect.
If the roles were switched around, the outcome would still be the same with each group irrespective of their actual ability and knowledge.