Attribution Theory Flashcards

1
Q

Kelley’s Covariation Model

A

People assign the cause of behaviour to the factor that covaries most closely with the behaviour

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2
Q

3 Classes of Information

A

Consistency: Information about the extent to which a behaviour ‘Y’ always co-occurs with a stimulus ‘X’

Distinctiveness: Information about whether a persons reaction occurs only with 1 stimulus, or is a common reaction to many stimuli

Consensus: Information about the extent to which other people react in the same way to a stimulus ‘X’

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3
Q

Internal attribution

A

If behaviour is high in consistency, but low in distinctiveness and consensus

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4
Q

External attribution

A

If behaviour is high in consistency, consensus and distinctiveness we make an external attribution

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5
Q

Limitation (1 example)

A

Critics argue that working out the covariations is difficult

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6
Q

Fundamental Attribution Error (FAE)

A

When we try to explain the reason why a person behaves the way they do, we tend to underestimate the role of situational factors and overestimate the role of personality and other personal characteristics

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7
Q

Dispositional & Situational Attributions

A

Dispositional - Attributing behaviour to personal characteristics
Situational - Attributing behaviour to personal circumstances

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8
Q

Why do we make FAE?

A

Focus of attention: More likely to notice the actor and their behaviour than the situation and circumstances influencing behaviour

Predictability of behaviour: To fulfill the observer’s need to predict and control the world and their surroundings

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9
Q

Self-serving Bias

A

Tendency of actors to attribute successful behaviour to dispositional/personal causes but unsuccessful behaviour to situational causes

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