If Barra was to blame those she consulted with for decisions that turned out wrong but took credit for decisions that turned out right, she would be suffering from the d) self-serving bias.
Self-serving bias refers to the common habit of taking credit for positive events or outcomes but blaming outside forces for negative outcomes.
Age, culture, clinical diagnosis, and more factors affect a person's self-serving bias. Self-serving bias is widely popular.
In this case, Barra is not affected by actor/observer difference, stereotyping effect, self-fulfilling prophecy, or fundamental attribution error.
Thus, when Barra takes credit for the right outcomes but turns to blame outside forces when the outcome turned out wrong, she is suffering from self-serving bias.
Learn more about self-serving bias at https://brainly.com/question/1325291
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