Your dog Hans loves to ride in the car. Whenever anyone picks up a set of keys he races for the door. When your grandmother, who is afraid of dogs, arrives for a visit, Hans is not allowed to ride in the car. By the end of her two-week visit,
he has ceased going to the door when the keys come out. However, after a brief vacation away from home, he's back at the door again as soon as he hears the keys. Why?
a. Generalization has occurred.
b. Counterconditioning occurred during the vacation.
c. Spontaneous recovery has occurred.
d. Grandma produced external inhibition in the dog.
c
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Telling a story taps into the __________ functions of memory allocation, planning, inhibition, and other cognitive processes necessary for guiding intentional behavior.
Fill in the blank(s) with the appropriate word(s).
By the end of the first year, a baby's ability to manipulate objects greatly expands with the development of
A) the pincer grasp. B) the ulnar grasp. C) the fine-motor reflex. D) prereaching.