Sovi.AI - AI Math Tutor

Scan to solve math questions

QUESTION IMAGE

adolescence isn’t an aberration when i tell people i study the adolesce…

Question

adolescence isn’t an aberration when i tell people i study the adolescent brain, the immediate response is often a joke—something along the lines of: “what? teenagers have brains?” for some reason, it’s socially acceptable to mock people in this stage of their lives. but when you think about it, this is strange: we wouldn’t ridicule other age groups in the same way. imagine if we went 2. which of the following behaviors that the author mentions can make adolescents seem different? a risk - taking 1. yes 2. no b lying and deceiving 1. yes 2. no c self - consciousness 1. yes 2. no d altered sleep habits 1. yes 2. no e taking responsibility 1. yes 2. no

Explanation:

Response

To solve this, we would need the full text of the passage (since we can only see part of it with a "Scroll for more" option). However, based on typical content about adolescent behavior and the options:

  • Risk - taking (A), lying/deceiving (B), self - consciousness (C), and altered sleep habits (D) are often behaviors associated with adolescents that can make them seem different, while taking responsibility (E) is more of a mature behavior. But without the full passage, we can't be certain. If we assume from common adolescent studies:
Brief Explanations

If the passage discusses typical adolescent behaviors that deviate from adult norms, risk - taking (A), lying and deceiving (B), self - consciousness (C), and altered sleep habits (D) are behaviors that can make adolescents seem different. Taking responsibility (E) is a behavior that aligns more with maturity, so it's less likely to make them seem different. But to be precise, we need the full passage. Assuming the passage mentions these as differentiating behaviors, for example, if the passage talks about how adolescents' risk - taking, lying/deceiving, self - consciousness, and altered sleep habits are behaviors that set them apart from other age groups, then the answer would be A, B, C, D (marking "Yes" for them and "No" for E). But since we don't have the full passage, this is a general analysis.

Answer:

(Assuming the passage supports the common adolescent behavior differences)
A. Risk - taking: 1. Yes
B. Lying and deceiving: 1. Yes
C. Self - consciousness: 1. Yes
D. Altered sleep habits: 1. Yes
E. Taking responsibility: 2. No