Hellman et al. (1998) had pairs of men and women work on two-person tasks in which the woman was always assigned a leadership role. The women in the study were

a. more confident in their leadership ability when they felt they had, at least in part, earned the position on meritthan when they were assigned to it based on their gender

b. less satisfied with their performance on the task when they felt they had been appointed leader based on meritthan when they were assigned to it based on gender.
c. more negative in their appraisals of their performance than their male partners when gender was in any waypart of the decisional process for assigning leaders.
d. likely to perceive the leadership selection process as unfair to the extent that their gender contributed in anyway to their leadership position.

a

Psychology

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In the U. S. today, the ideal death trajectory is:

a. to die in battle, fighting for one's country b. to die suddenly, without warning c. to have about 6 months after the diagnosis of a terminal illness to adjust d. to have 2-3 years after the diagnosis of a terminal illness to adjust

Psychology

_____ is the hypothesis that individuals can recognize emotions expressed by members of their own culture relatively better than of those from a different culture

a) Outgroup advantage b) Ingroup advantage c) Outgroup disadvantage d) Ingroup disadvantage

Psychology