Answer:
Overconfidence.
Explanation:
This question is missing its options. The options for this question are:
Dual Processing,
The I-knew-it-all-along phenomenon,
Hindsight Bias, OR
Overconfidence
In psychology, the overconfidence effect refers to a bias in which a person's subjective confidence in his/her judgements or abilities is greater than how they actually are. In other words, we think our skills or talents are better than they actually are.
In this example, at the beginning of the school year, the students were asked to predict a variety of their own social behaviors and they reported being 84% assured in their self-predictions. However, their predictions were only correct 71% of the time. We can see that <u>their judgements about their social behaviors (or the confidence on them) were greater than how they actually were</u>. Therefore, this would be an example of Overconfidence.
D. Human population increased significantly in a short period of time
Marwa Elshakry-Reading Darwin in Arabic, 1860-1950-University Of Chicago Press (2014).pdf
448 Pages
winism.
I believe the answer is: Common underlying principles
Common underlying principles refer to the standard set of mind that we commonly use to approach a certain problem.
If an individual is used to look everything that happen in his/life postiively, that individual would less likely to develop suicidal thought regardless of his/her problems.