Lecture 3: Attribution Theory Flashcards
The Naive scientist
People rationally and logically test out hypotheses about the behaviour of others because of the desire for consistency and stability
Form hypothesis: observe effect and look for cause
Heider (1958) What 2 needs are people motivated by
- form coherent view of the world: as there is so much information
- gain control over the environment: to make the world more predictable
Attribution
=process by which people use information to make inferences about the causes of behaviour and events
Heider and Simmel 1944
1944
Showed people ascribe intentionality even to movement of geometric shapes: demonstrating our need to ascribe intentionality
Intentionality
Purposeful or goal directed behaviour
Locus of causality
- internal
- external
Causality is perceived to originate
- internal: explanation locates cause as being internal to person
- external- locates cause being external to the person
Stability
Extent to which causes are perceived to be relatively stable and permanent vs temporary and fluctuating
Controllability
Causes can be influenced by other vs extent to which they are random
Correspondent Inference Theory
Jones and Davis
1965
Try to explain that the actions of someone relates to stable personality characteristics
*people prefer dispositional attributions rather than situational because dispositional are better for making predictions about behaviour
2 stages:
1. Was the action deliberate
2. Which personality trait caused it
The Co-variation Model
Kelly
1967
Covariation=when behaviour occurs, seeming cause must be present at the same time
From multiple potential causes ascribe causality to the one that co-varies with the behaviour to the greatest extent
The Co-variation Model: 3 types of info necessary to create attributions
Consensus= how much others react in the same way
Consistency= how much target person reacts in the same way on different occasions
Distinctiveness= how much target person reacts in the same way in other social contexts
Biases in Attribution
FAE
Biases towards making internal attributions rather than external
Jones and Harris 1967
1967
*****
Biases in Attribution
The actor observer bias
People attribute own behaviour to external causes but others to external (Jones and Nisbett, 1972)
Perceptual salience- actors attention is away from themselves (external), observers attention is on actor (internal)
Heuristics
Time saving mental shortcuts that reduce complex judgments to simple rules of thumb