The best answer is a. Assumes an external locus of control.
Locus of control deals with their perceived capability to control events and outcomes. A person with an internal locus of control believes that he or she can influence events and their outcomes, while someone with an external locus of control blames outside forces for everything.
Answer:
It is unusual for those with the antagonism personality trait to display little emotion.
Explanation:
People with antagonism personality tend to find it really easy to confront other people if they find something that they don't like. In most cases, this confrontation will be filled with emotion such as anger that they use as a fuel to tear down that other people apart with their words (it is also quite often if the confrontation escalates to aggression)
I think its A. not sure though
Egocentrism
From the age between 2-7 years old, a child is in the "preoperational stage" of development, characterized by symbolic representation or thinking and egocentric thinking. The child also tends to plan, perceive, and solve problems based on appearances (e.g. a half cup of water in a wide glass is to him/her smaller in amount compared to the same amount of water in a tall thin glass).
A good example of the child's egocentric thinking is most apparent before the child enters kindergarten. When a child is told to hide, he/she usually only covers his/her face, because in his/her thinking, "if i can't see you, then you can't see me!" In egocentrism, the child thinks that other people think and perceive the world the way he/she does.
However, a recent study tried to explain this action of "ineffective hiding" in children as their way of demanding or insisting on reciprocity, and mutual recognition and regard, instead of merely egocentrism (source: https://theconversation.com/young-children-are-terrible-at-hiding-psychologists-have-a-new-theory-why-67979)