Answer:
The correct answer is  High-context cultures.
Explanation:
High-context cultures are those cultures where the use of contextual elements communication is mainly used and is implicitly stated. The tone of voice or body language are clear examples of those contextual elements. The concept was proposed by anthropologist Edward T. Hall (1914-2009) in his book <em>Beyond Culture</em> (1976).  
The members of high-context cultures have close, long-lasting relationships that allows them to know each other so the rules for their communication do not have to be explicitly stated. Examples of high-context cultures are <em>Japan, Brazil, African tribal groups, Iraq, Iran, and most cultures in the Middle East</em>.
 
        
             
        
        
        
Answer:
cognitions.                                     
Explanation:
Fritz Heider was a famous Gestalt psychologist, who is responsible for giving rise to the social cognition field. He wrote a book named "The Psychology of Interpersonal Relations" during 1958, which was based on the evolution of the attribution theory.
According to Fritz Heider, the attribution theory is defined as a process through which an individual tends to evaluate the behavior of oneself and another person. It is responsible for an individual making causal explanations. 
Social cognition is defined as a branch in psychology that aims at the way an individual process, apply and store different information related to social situations and people.
 
        
             
        
        
        
<span>Jerome's failure to retrieve his paper is analogous to the decay theory of forgetting, whereas Kaci's failure better resembles the interference theory. It is a decay theory because Jerome's term paper file in the computer was corrupted resulting in the loss of all his files including his paper whereas for Kaci, it is interference because her term paper was mixed with all the other documents in her hard drive.</span>
        
             
        
        
        
Answer:    Sensory memory
Explanation:  Sensory memory is part of the total memory and refers to that part of memory that collects and stores sensory information that is collected through sensory receptors. After this collected short-term information is collected through sensory receptors and processed in the nervous system is stored in this sensory memory. This type of memory is, in fact,  the shortest memory, since it lasts as long as the external stimulus lasted on our senses. Then, after this short-term external stimulus information, that is, sensory information, this information is transferred to short-term memory.
 
        
             
        
        
        
The correct answer is Visual
It is the first memory process, during which information is transformed so that it can be stored. This is a physiological process that begins with attention. A memorable event causes neurons to fire faster, organizing information into a systematic matrix that can be remembered later. The way we encode information determines how it will be stored and what suggestions will be effective when we try to retrieve it.