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:
option a:high in openness to experience and low in agreeableness
Explanation:
this five personality theory in psychology are used as a scale of measurement and to have an indepth knowlege and understanding of differences among individuals in terms of their personality.
These five factors are; Openness to experience
, Conscientiousness
, Extraversion and Agreeableness
Openness to experience means the open mindedness of an individual to explore new ground, and people with high openess are wide open to learn about new cultures, beliefs, new environment and new ideas. they are open to learn and new relationship.
agreeableness entails friendliness and cooperation. People who score low in agreeableness are those people who are rude, less friendly, more concern about themselves than others, careless in pleasing others and very suspicious of others motives.
Basically there hiring hackers to defend and find hackers
The one that describes a type of tax that funds city programs is : C. Local income tax
Fourteen states and Washington DC allowed their cities to create their own regulation regarding local income tax, which they could use to funds several city programs such as park maintenance, building public benches, etc
hope this helps
The correct answer is True
According to psychology, perception consists of an organization and interpretation of the stimuli that were received by the senses and that makes it possible to identify certain objects and events.
Perception has two stages, the sensorial and the intellectual. The two complement each other, because sensations do not provide a real view of the world, and must be worked on by the intellect