Are there any differences in health between people who have solid social support and people who don't?

a. No—psychologists suspect that there are differences, but research has not consistently found any evidence that social support makes a real difference.
b. Yes—although social support does not appear to improve people's physical health, it does improve their mood and general psychological well-being.
c. Yes—social support appears to improve physical and psychological well-being, though it does not improve objective measures of health (e.g., recovery time from illness).
d. Yes—social support has been tied to better health, more rapid recovery from illness, and a lower risk for mortality.

D

Psychology

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Episodes of binging and purging are characteristic of

a. social anxiety disorder b. anorexia nervosa c. narcissistic personalities d. bulimia nervosa

Psychology

Analysis of experimental data by the F ratio means that the independent

variable could have been manipulated a. at only two levels b. at two or more levels c. at only three levels d. none of these, since F cannot handle experimental data

Psychology