Explain how cross-cultural considerations affect the idea of adolescent identity crisis

Answer:

Cross-cultural considerations suggest that the "storm and stress" of the transition to adult life is a consequence of the affluence, education, and independence of young people in Western, industrialized societies. In other cultures, an individual's life course may be determined by parental authority or economic necessity, neither of which allows for an identity crisis. In the not-too-distant past, people also assumed adult roles at much younger ages in the United States. In some families and socioeconomic groups, they still do.

Psychology

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The main active ingredient in Red Bull and other energy drinks is

A. taurine. B. caffeine. C. guanine. D. tyrosine.

Psychology

A problem with interpreting results from longitudinal studies of aging is:

a) Cohort effects are not controlled for. b) The findings may not generalize to other cohorts. c) The changes found may be the result of aging effects, not cohort effects. d) The most active and healthy subjects may drop out of the study, leading to pessimistic findings about aging.

Psychology