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    Lab

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    of the specialized underlying structures of these life-forms. In order for us to appreciate these special adaptation‚ we first need to know how a typical plant or an animal cell organelle behaves in different water and solute concentrations. In this lab‚ we will determine the effects of hypertonic‚ isotonic and hypotonic solutions on plant and animal cells. In general when an animals cell’s placed in hypertonic solution it shrivels; a plant cell on the other hand undergoes plasmolysis. When an animal

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    Success of Dugesia tigrina regeneration in different water temperatures Abstract: The experiment at hand aimed to determine if the species Duguesia tigrina has an optimal temperature for regeneration. The experiment used three different spring water treatments of different temperatures. The treatments included a cool 12° treatment‚ a room temperature 25° treatment‚ and a warm 30° treatment. Each of the D. tigrina were cut in half‚ and each half was placed into a designated section of a water treatment

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    Memory Experiment

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    Seth Dennison and Jenna Snyder John Bryan Psychology of Gender 104 10/31/2012 Psychological Gender Experiment For our psychological gender experiment we chose to focus on the topic of memory differences between genders. At first we wanted to figure out if one gender had a better memory than the other‚ but then we also wanted to observe whether or not their memory showed better results when the objects were related to their gender. Therefore‚ the hypothesis we constructed was: If

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    Using Google

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    Using Google An extremely common source of information this day in age is the internet. Because of the internet and the increasing availability of wireless streaming of information‚ most people use it every day for multiple different types of tasks. Because of the massive amount of information that can be obtained through the internet‚ it is necessary to find information by using search engines such as Google. A search engine like Google will take keywords and search through a massive database

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    Osmosis Experiment

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    Osmosis Experiment Subject: Professor Egg-avier Duration: 3 weeks (Oct 2nd – Oct 16th) Week 1 On October 2nd my group was giving a raw egg (weighing 58.8 grams) and placed it into a clear mason jar with 200mL of vinegar. The ph levels of our vinegar equaled a 2 which tells us that vinegar is a fairly acidic liquid. Once submerged in the vinegar‚ little bubbles began to appear around the egg’s shell. We believed this to be carbon dioxide escaping from the shell. We left our egg to sit in the

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    Experiment 1 Background Diffusion is a process‚ in relation to the spontaneous movement of molecules from an area of high concentration‚ to an area of low concentration down a concentration gradient. It is a type of passive transport method‚ that requires no cellular energy (ATP). This movement occurs‚ until a state of equilibrium has been established on both sides of the membrane. The diffusion of molecules happens at cellular level‚ through a cell membrane via the pores. The cell membrane

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    Kansas Experiment

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    crimes occurring when there is police present. These strategies were made to reduce the crimes and make the public feel more safe in the street. The Kansas City Experiment started on October 1972 and continued to 1973 ‚ it was administered by the Kansas City Police Department and evaluated by the Police Foundation. The Kansas City Experiment tested the use of preventive patrol on crime rates and citizens fear of crime. The police foundation divided Kansas into fifteen different areas‚ and those fifteen

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    Manganese Experiment

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    a tremendous variety of oxidation states that appear in its compounds. The oxidation numbers range from Mn (III) in compounds like Mn(NO)3CO to Mn (VII) in KMnO4. Compounds of manganese range in oxidation number between theses two extremes. This experiment involves the preparation of a Mn (III) complex of actylacetone (also named 2‚4-pentanedione) which is a useful starting material for the preparation of other Mn (III) compounds. Manganese (III) complexes are relatively stable and can be prepared

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    To begin the experiment‚ 8 ml of 0.1% Bromophenol blue (BPB) solution was made by diluting 0.25% BPB solution. From the 0.1% BPB solution‚ six diluted solutions‚ ranging from 1:50 to 1:10000‚ were prepared. Each solution was then run in the UV spectrophotometer to measure the absorbance at 590nm. DI water was used as a blank and samples were measured starting from the least concentrated one. The graph of concentration versus absorbance was plotted from the obtained data. In the second part‚ each

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    The Zimbardo Experiment

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    Press. • Zimbardo‚ P. G.‚ Maslach‚ C.‚ & Haney‚ C. (2000). Reflections on the Stanford Prison Experiment: Genesis‚ transformations‚ consequences. In T. Blass (Ed.)‚ Obedience to authority: Current Perspectives on the Milgram paradigm (pp.193-237). Mahwah‚ N.J.: Erlbaum. • Haney‚ C.‚ & Zimbardo‚ P. G. (1998). The past and future of U.S. prison policy: Twenty-five years after the Stanford Prison Experiment. American Psychologist‚ 53‚ 709-727. • Zimbardo‚ P. G.‚ Haney‚ C.‚ Banks‚ W. C.‚ & Jaffe‚ D

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