Overcompensation Overcompensation refers to [producing a greater effort than is needed to overcome a difficulty or resolve a defect. Often used in connection with attempts to overcome Overcompensation refers to [producing a greater effort than is needed to overcome a difficulty or resolve a defect. Often used in connection with attempts to overcome
Dehumanisation Dehumanisation is the process of treating other people as something other than human. Often done out of fear and with the purpose of
Brain localisation Brain localisation is the controversial hypothesis that specific mental experiences or functions are associated with specific areas of the brain.
Workers compensation insurance Workers compensation insurance which it pays part of an employee’s wage or salary plus medical expenses, and any necessary rehabilitation, retraining, job placement, or counseling, if a worker is accidentally injured on the job or contracts a job-related disease.
Anticipatory socialisation Anticipatory socialisation is an aspect of socialisation where an individual prepares for a future role by taking on values and ATTITUDES associated with the role before actually occupying it.
Organisation Organisation— people with shared aims coming together to achieve those aims. This involves division of labour, management of resources ...
Partial compensation Partial compensation is an arrangement in which the delivery of goods to one party is partially compensated for by buying back a certain amount of ...
Full compensation Full compensation is an arrangement in which the delivery of goods to one party is fully compensated for by buying back more than 100 percent of the ...
Reverse causation Reverse causation is a situation in which one variable is said to cause another variable, when in reality the reverse is true.
Compensation agreement Compensation agreement refers to an agreement by an exporter of plant or equipment to take compensation in the form of future output from that plant.