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1) The term that is used to describe any period

of accelerated physical development,


especially the pubescent growth spurt. The
adolescent growth spurt is a rapid increase in
the individual's height and weight during
puberty resulting from the simultaneous
release of growth hormones, thyroid hormones,
and androgens.[44] Males experience their
growth spurt about two years later, on average,
than females.
2) Acquired aphasia typically develops in healthy
children who acutely or progressively lose
receptive and expressive language ability
coincident with the appearance of paroxysmal
electroencephalographic (EEG) changes. In 1957,
Landau and Kleffner initially described
acquired epileptic aphasia and subsequently
reluctantly agreed to the attachment of their
names to the syndrome.

3) Secondary aging processes result from disease


and poor health practices (e.g. no exercise,
smoking, excess fat and other forms of self-
damage) and are often preventable, whether
through lifestyle choice or modern medicine.
Variance because of biological maturation,
but hastened as a result of disease and poor
health practices .
4) Self-esteem is your overall opinion of
yourself how you feel about your abilities
and limitations. When you have healthy self-
esteem, you feel good about yourself and see
yourself as deserving the respect of others.
When you have low self-esteem, you put little
value on your opinions and ideas
5) Most of the early work on peer culture focuses
on adolescents, with a primary concern on
outcomes (positive and negative) of experience
with peers on individual development. peer
culture is defined as a stable set of
activities or routines, artifacts, values, and
concerns that children and youth produce and
share with peers.
6) Autonomy versus shame and doubt is the second
stage of Erik Eriksons stages
of psychosocial development. This stage
occurs between the ages of 18 months to
approximately age two to three years.
According to Erikson, children at this stage
are focused on developing a greater sense of
self-control.
7) Autism is a neurodevelopmental
disorder characterized by impaired social
interaction, verbal and non-verbal
communication, and restricted and repetitive
behavior. Parents usually notice signs in the
first two years of their child's
life.[2] These signs often develop gradually,
though some children with autism reach
their developmental milestones at a normal
pace and then regress.[3]
8) The superego is the ethical component of the
personality and provides the moral standards
by which the ego operates.
The superego'scriticisms, prohibitions, and
inhibitions form a person's conscience, and
its positive aspirations and ideals represent
one's idealized self-image, or ego ideal.
9) Conservation is the act of preserving,
guarding or protecting; wise
use. Conservation may refer to: Main
usage: Conservation (ethic) of biodiversity,
environment, and natural resources, including
protection and management.
10) Postnatal development can be broadly divided

into the age categories of: Neonatal (birth


to 1 month), Infancy (1 month to 2 years),
Childhood (2 years to puberty), Puberty (12
years to mid-teens) and Young Adult a new
category (late teens to early twenties
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1) Statistics is the study of the collection,
analysis, interpretation, presentation, and
organization of data. In
applying statistics to, e.g., a scientific,
industrial, or societal problem, it is
conventional to begin with
astatistical population or
a statistical model process to be studied.
2) In machine learning
and statistics, classification is the
problem of identifying to which of a set of
categories (sub-populations) a new observation
belongs, on the basis of a training set of
data containing observations (or instances)
whose category membership is known
3) The mode is the value that appears most
often in a set of data. Themode of a discrete
probability distribution is the value x at
which its probability mass function takes its
maximum value. In other words, it is the value
that is most likely to be sampled.
4) A normal distribution is a very important
statistical data distribution pattern
occurring in many natural phenomena, such as
height, blood pressure, lengths of objects
produced by machines, etc.
5) Positive correlation is a relationship between
two variables in which both variables move in
tandem. A positive correlation exists when
as one variable decreases, the other variable
also decreases and vice versa. In statistics,
a perfect positive correlation is represented
by the value +1.00, while a 0.00 indicates no
correlation and a -1.00 indicates a
perfect negative correlation.
6) Continue reading about types of data and
measurement scales: nominal, ordinal,
interval, and ratio Ordinal. With ordinal
scales, it is the order of the values is
what's important and significant, but the
differences between each one is not really
7) A chart depicting two or more characteristics
in the form of bars of length proportional in
magnitude of the characteristics. For example,
a chart comparing the age and sex distribution
of two populations may be drawn with sets of
bars, one bar of each pair for each population,
and one pair for each age group.
8) The point biserial correlation coefficient
(rpb) is a correlationcoefficient used when
one variable (e.g. Y) is dichotomous; Y can
either be "naturally" dichotomous, like gender,
or an artificially dichotomized variable.
9) the number of independent values or quantities
which can be assigned to a statistical
distribution. each of a number of
independently variable factors affecting the
range of states in which a system may exist,
in particular any of the directions in which
independent motion can occur.
10) A two-tailed test, also known as a non
directional hypothesis, is the
standard test of significance to determine
if there is a relationship between variables
in either direction. Two-tailed tests do
this by dividing the .05 in two and putting
half on each side of the bell curve.

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