Stemming from the urban overload hypothesis, consider what you would do in the following situation. You have just run over a nail with your car during a long road trip,

but luckily you have run-flat tires and can drive up to fifty miles before your tire will deflate. Based on what you know from the urban overload hypothesis, where should you drive to if you were going to seek help from strangers for your tire?
a. the nearest major city
b. the nearest moderately sized city
c. a completely deserted road
d. a small, rural town

Answer: D

Psychology

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In cross-sectional research on development, each of the groups studied is of a different:

sex. social class. age. political affiliation.

Psychology

Parents seldom spend a lot of time explaining to their children how to ride a bicycle. Instead, they often get a bike with training wheels and let the children learn for themselves how to ride a bike

This is because our understanding about how to ride a bicycle is based on a. automatic thinking, which is difficult to describe to someone else. b. controlled thinking that can only be learned by experience. c. intuition, which is difficult to express in language that a child can understand. d. personal experience that is not likely to be believed by the child.

Psychology