Answer:
A. self-handicapping
Explanation:
In psychology, the term self-handicap refers to an strategy that people use in order to enhance the opportunity to attribute failure to external situations and not take responsibility for it. This strategy is used in order to protect our self-esteem (since we can attribute failure to external factors and not to our own abilities).
In this example, before an exam Marc tells you that he's tired because he partied the night before. We can see that, <u>by saying this, if he gets a bad grade, he can attribute it to the fact that he was tired because of the party </u>(which would be an external situation and therefore he won't attribute it to his lack of knowledge which would be an internal factor). Therefore, Marc is engaging in self-handicapping.
Answer:
Interestingly, interaction analyses revealed that features of the social and physical environment worked together: for example, levels of walking were highest when a neighbourhood had both high levels of social interaction and aesthetically-pleasing built form.
Answer: Assimilated
Explanation: I had this flash card on quiz-let