Answer:
availability bias
Explanation:
Also known as the availability heuristic, the availability bias describes a mental shortcut and error in thinking that bases judgements and decisions on available or immediate examples that come to a given person's mind when evaluating a specific topic, concept, method or decision. Such as the manager does above when he believes an employee has exhibited the worst behaviour the company has ever seen because it is only recent and it is "an immediate example".
Answer:
<em><u>Question 1 </u></em>- The unconscious is the deepest part of the human mind, where there are your fears, struggles, and your personality. It's what you can't see. According to Freud, the unconscious keeps three circumstances that are responsible for "shape" human being. The Id is the identity, the most primitive characteristic of human mind; the Ego is what make humans sociable creatures, adapting humans to live in society, it seeks to regulate the impulses of the Id while trying to satisfy them in a less immediate and more realistic way; the Superego is a kind of counselor, telling the individual what is morally acceptable, allowing him to live in society.
<em><u>Question 2 - </u></em>Personality changes over time because we are always creating new ideas, learning something new, each day is different from the other, and the world is not something static. We never stop to change and adapt ourselves.
Explanation:
The correct answer is E. Nervous
Explanation:
The nervous system is the one in control of the transmission of information in the body, and therefore the system that makes possible coordinated actions and movements. In the case of the Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) or similar conditions, neurons controlling voluntary movements and actions do not work correctly, and therefore the individual cannot coordinate movements or can do this with certain difficulties. This explains symptoms such as difficulties in coordinated movements, stiff muscles or muscle weakness that is part of ALS. According to this, the type of tissue ALS involves is nervous.