Attribution Theory Flashcards

1
Q

What is attribution?

A
  • A perception of the reason for an outcome of an event/performance
  • If done correctly it maintains motivation and task persistence
  • Classified by Weiner in 1974 and these reasons fall into two sub sections: Locus of Causality and the Stability Dimension
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2
Q

What is the Locus of Causality?

A
  • It’s in the control of the performer (internal) or out of their control (external)
  • Internal attribute - within the performers control: effort
  • External attribute - outside the performers control: the referee
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3
Q

What is the Stability Dimension?

A
  • It is a permenant or changeable reason
  • Unstable attribute - can change in a small amount of time: luck
  • Stable attribute - unlikely to change in a short amount of time: quality of a team
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4
Q

What are the factors affecting attribution?

A
  • Refs decision
  • Ability
  • Luck
  • Coaching you’ve received
  • Playing a good team
  • Effort applied
  • Amount of practice that occured
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5
Q

What is the self serving bias?

A
  • Using external and/or unstable reasons for losing
  • When you win it’s because of you and when you lose it’s because of an external reason
  • Blame the ref or weather as they are external and unstable
  • Praise effort and reward ability
  • To maintain motivation dont attribute the loss to internal and stable attributes
  • It promotes self esteem as players feel responsible for the positive result
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6
Q

Attribution, example, if used…

A

Internal, Stable: Ability - reduces confidence and motivation, learned helplessness
Internal, Unstable: Effort - maintains confidence and motivation
External, Stable: Task difficulty - maintains confidence and motivation as we cant control it
External, Unstable: Luck - maintains confidence and motivation, self serving bias
- To improve these we want everything to be attributed to external and unstable attributes via attribution retraining

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7
Q

What is learned helplessness?

A
  • Using internal/stable reasons for losing, when doubt in ability affects the player and confidence is lowered
  • The performer perceives failure as inevitable = drop in task persistance
  • Lack of effort and motivation
  • Exhibit avoidance behaviour
  • 2 types: Global/General learned helplessness -general sporting situations, e.g., not good at racket sports. Specific/Situational learned helplessness - specific sporting situations, e.g., not good at serving to win the match
  • Can be stopped by attributing success to internal and stable factors and by negative feedback and criticism
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8
Q

What are some strategies to avoid learned helplessness?

A
  • Develop self efficacy
  • Attribution retraining - attributing reason for failure to effective things
  • Avoid social comparisons
  • Blame external causes - coaches, equipment, tactics
  • Goal setting - set performance/process/task oriented rather than outcome goals
  • Mental rehearsal/visualisation/imagery
  • Positive feedback/reinforcement
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9
Q

What is attribution retraining?

A
  • Focus on positive attribution rather than negative
  • Shift focus from internal to external factors
  • Change the reasons for success and failure
  • Promotes self esteem
  • Increases confidence by removing learned helplessness
  • Set realistic/achievable task oriented goals
  • Raise self efficacy using Banduras model
  • Highlight previous successful performances
  • Give positive reinforcement and encouragement
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