also administrative support record) a document that has been preserved because it facilitates the operations and management of an agency but which does not relate directly to programs that help the agency achieve its mission.
<h2>Hope it helps you my friend</h2><h2>Good morning</h2>
Spain is located southwest of France, not west of it
Research on <u>"the fundamental attribution error" </u>suggests it is <u>"common"</u> for people to assume that dispositions are the underlying causes of most behaviors.
The fundamental attribution error is our tendency to clarify somebody's conduct in light of inward factors, for example, identity or air, and to think little of the impact that outside variables, for example, situational impacts, have on someone else's conduct. We may, for instance, clarify the way that somebody is jobless in view of his character, and point the finger at him for his predicament, when in certainty he was as of late laid off because of a lazy economy. Obviously, there are times when we're right about our suspicions, however the key attribution blunder is our inclination to clarify the conduct of others in light of character or air. This is especially obvious when the conduct is negative.
Under the Privacy Rule, the patient has the right to request communication byalternative means.
These alternative means refer to oral, written, or electronic types of communication. So, the patient doesn't have to use just a single type of communication (usually the spoken form), but can rather rely on technology and paper as well.
The correct answer is the guilty knowledge test.
It is a test done on a polygraph or lie detector which is supposed to be absolutely correct as it shows knowledge that only a guilty person might possess. An example would be if a suspect is asked to read the names of several weapons out loud and if the lie detector consistently shows a reaction when it comes to one particular weapon, it means that the suspect knows something he or she is not telling.