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The control of recognized hazards to achieve an acceptable level of risk. |
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The decrease in a value and if it is eliminated it is called total loss. |
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The decrease in a value and if it is eliminated it is called total loss. |
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any event that happens unexpectedly without a deliberate plans or cause and usually results in harm, injury, damage or loss |
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An expression of the combined severity and probability of loss |
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An error in action, calculation, opinion, or judgment caused by poor reasoning, carelessness, and insufficient knowledge |
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The difference between desired and actual performance. |
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Maximum level of risk that a person will assume in any given activity. |
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The subjective judgment that people make about the characteristics and severity of a risk. |
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An effect whereby individual people may tend to adjust their behavior in response to perceived change in risk. |
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Primary goal is to inflict physical injury or psychological harm |
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Occurs in quest of a non-aggressive goal |
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Goal directed behavior that may, and often does, involve the sue of legitimate verbal and physical force. Exhibits no intent to injure and does not violate the conservatively agreed upon rules of the sport. Often mislabeled. |
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motivation that comes from inside an individual rather than from any external or outside rewards such as money or grades. |
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motivation that comes from factors outside an individual |
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Someone’s subjective confidence in their judgments is reliably greater than their objective accuracy, especially when confidence is relatively high. |
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A tendency for some people to focus on “what’s happened lately” when evaluating or judging something. |
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Cost endured that shouldn’t effect your future decisions. EX: Gambling. |
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Finding evidence that is something in your favor or that supports your point. |
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Person who invokes crime or harm for no particular reason. |
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The criminally fraudulent process of attempting to acquire sensitive information such as usernames, passwords and credit card details by masquerading as a trustworthy entity in an electronic communication. |
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A computer programs that copies itself and infects another computer. |
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A self replicating malware computer program that uses a computer network to send copies of itself to other nodes. |
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