Counterfactual thinking refers to the tendency to view outcomes as inevitable and predictable after we know the outcome, and to believe that we could have predicted what happened
a. True
b. False
Answer: b
Psychology
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As a newborn, Li Chan went through periods in which her legs would jerk in a regular pattern every minute or so. This is known as a
a. rhyme. c. route. b. rhythm. d. cycle.
Psychology
Tversky (1972) suggests that in making decisions we:
A) rely more on intuition in evaluating questionable circumstances B) select alternatives by gradually eliminating less attractive choices C) usually weigh all the alternative probabilities D) rely on similar operations based on argument form E) tend to go with the first option given, despite the persuasiveness of subsequent options
Psychology