1. Visual recognition involves storing and retrieving of memories.A. Psychologists of the Gestalt School maintain that objects are recognised as a whole in a procedure.B. Neural activity, triggered by the eye, forms an image in the brain’s memory system that constitutes an internal representation of the viewed object.C. Controversy surrounds the question of whether recognition is a single one-step procedure or a serial step-by-step one.D. When an object is encountered again, it is matched with its internal recognition and thereby recognised.6. The internal representation is matched with the retinal image in a single operation.
@ (A,B) = average of A and B*(A,B) = product of A and B/(A,B) = A divided by B
Which expression gives the sum of A and B?
If A = 2 and B = 4, what is the value of \(@(/(*(A, B), B), A)\)?
1. The New Economic Policy comprises the various policy measures and changes introduced since July 1991.A. There is a common thread running through all these measures.B. The objective is simple to improve the efficiency of the system.C. The regulator mechanism involving multitude of controls has fragmented the capacity and reduced competition even in the private sector.D. The thrust of the new policy is towards creating a more competitive environment as a means to improving the productivity and efficiency of the economy.6. This is to be achieved by removing the banners and restrictions on the entry and growth of firms.
1. India’s experience of industrialization is characteristic of the difficulties faced by a newly independent developing country.A. In 1947, India was undoubtedly an under – developed country with one of the lowest per capita incomes in the world.B. Indian industrialization was the result of a conscious deliberate policy of growth by an indigenous political elite.C. Today India ranks fifth in the international comity of nations if measured in terms of purchasing power.D. Even today however, the benefits of Indian industrialization since independence have not reached the masses.6. Industrialization in India has been a limited success; one more example of growth without development.
1. It is significant that one of the most common objections to competition is that it is blind.A. This is important because in a system of free enterprise based on private property chances are not equal and there is indeed a strong case for reducing the inequality of opportunity.B. Rather it is a choice between a system where it is the will of few persons that decides who is to get what and one where it depends at least partly, on the ability and the enterprise of the people concerned.C. Although competition and justice may have little else in common, it is as much a commendation of competition as of justice that it is no respecter of persons.D. The choice today is not between a system in which everybody will get what he deserves according to some universal standard and one where individuals’ shares are determined by chance of goodwill.6. The fact that opportunities open to the poor in a competitive society are much more restricted than those open to the rich, does not make it less true that in such a society the poor are more free than a person commanding much greater material comfort in a different type of society.