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Bollok, Sandor; Takacs, Johanna; Kalmar, Zsuzsanna; Dobay, Beata – Biomedical Human Kinetics, 2011
Study aim: To determine and evaluate the spectrum of sport motivation of young adults. Material and methods: A group of 600 subjects, aged 17-19 years, participated in the study. An "ad hoc" questionnaire was applied to assess the 4 motivational factors: competition and success-oriented motivation, external accommodation, physical…
Descriptors: Physical Fitness, Motivation, Competition, Young Adults
Kernis, Michael H. – 1984
Perceived locus of causality is an important factor in assessing the impact of prior success or failure on later performance. In order to examine the effects of internal (self) versus external (partner) attributions on subsequent performance, two studies were conducted. In the first study 80 female undergradutes worked on a series of mazes with an…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, College Students, Higher Education, Locus of Control
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Triplet, Rodney G.; Cohn, Ellen S. – Social Behavior and Personality, 1984
Attempts to assess whether social learning or attributional theory best accounts for expectancies of future success in college students (N=159) with a modification of a task used by Weiner and Kukla (1970). Results indicated partial support for elements of both the social learning and attribution theories. (LLL)
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, College Students, Expectation, Higher Education
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Sweeney, Paul D.; And Others – Sex Roles: A Journal of Research, 1982
To test the hypothesis that women exhibit an externality bias in their performance attribution, male and female college students made effort, ability, luck, and task difficulty attributions for their performance on a recent course examination. Findings suggested an internality bias among men, rather than an externality bias among women. (Author/GC)
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, College Students, Females, Locus of Control
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Perry, Raymond P.; Dickens, Wenda J. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1984
Following an incentive (low, high) manipulation, college students received response-outcome contingency training. All students then observed a lecture. Postlecture results indicated that the high- compared to the low-expressive lecturer increased achievement and internal locus in contingent but not noncontingent students for low-incentive…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Attribution Theory, Helplessness, Higher Education
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Halperin, Marcia S.; Abrams, Doris L. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1978
Undergraduates in an economics course reported prior grade averages and their final exam predictions. Students rated the influence that ability, effort, task difficulty, and luck had on performance and completed an achievement motivation scale. Regression analyses provided support for the attribution model of achievement expectations. Sex…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Attribution Theory, Expectation, Higher Education
Iso-Ahola, Seppo E. – Research Quarterly, 1979
Test results from a motor skill competition indicated that both girls and boys have a tendency to accept the stereotype of males' superiority in sport ability. (JD)
Descriptors: Attitudes, Attribution Theory, Locus of Control, Performance Factors
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Van Overwalle, Frank – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1989
Four samples of university freshmen (N=859) rated the influence of 10 possible factors on exam performance. A subset sample (n=209) assessed 10 factors along 3 of the 4 dimensions identified in the first study. Results indicate that the dimensions of locus, stability, control, and globality constitute major causal attributions. (TJH)
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, College Freshmen, Factor Structure, Higher Education
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Barnett, Mark A.; Kaiser, Donn L. – 1977
The relationship between a child's assumption of responsibility for intellectual-academic successes and failures and various performance scores was examined in the present investigation. An expanded version of the Crandall, Katkovsky, and Crandall (1967) Intellectual Achievement Responsibility (IAR) Questionnaire was administered to a total of 138…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Attribution Theory, Children, Developmental Psychology
Anderson, Craig A. – 1981
Research has shown that attributing failure to lack of ability leads to lower motivation than does attributing the failure to lack of effort. An attributional model of motivation and performance following failure was tested with college students (N=63), who were preselected on the basis of their attributional styles for interpersonal failures, as…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Expectation, Failure, Individual Power
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Lewis-Beck, J. Arline – Journal of Educational Research, 1978
Contrary to prediction, failure feedback increased the performance of all fifth graders involved in this study, whether they had scored high or low on a locus of control measure. (Ed./JD)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Attribution Theory, Failure, Feedback
Fullin, Christine; Mills, Brett D. – 1995
This paper reviews the development of attribution theory as it relates to sport from Fritz Heider's original model of attribution theory in 1958 to the present. The original model explains that individuals use four attribution factors to interpret and predict the outcome of an event--ability, effort, task difficulty, and luck. Bernard Weiner built…
Descriptors: Athletics, Attribution Theory, Helplessness, Higher Education
Rhodewalt, Frederick; Nahavandi, Afsaneh – 1982
The Type A behavior pattern, an independent risk factor for coronary heart disease, has been characterized as a response style for coping with perceived threats to control. Recent research suggests that self-attributional biases may play a role in the Type A's sensitivity to loss of control. Attributional mediation of Type A's experience of stress…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Behavior Patterns, Coping, Feedback
Dorfman, Peter W.; Stephan, Walter G. – 1981
Literature from organizational and social psychology has suggested that three types of factors influence performance, i.e., cognitive, affective and behavioral. A model was developed to test a set of propositions concerning the relationship between the three kinds of factors, and included attributions, expectancies, general emotional responses to…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Attribution Theory, Behavior Patterns, Cognitive Processes
Layden, Mary Anne; Ickes, William J. – 1977
The connection between self-esteem, sex, and attributional style was examined in two studies. Results indicated that for positive events, high self-esteem subjects make more internal attributions than low self-esteem subjects, and for negative events, high self-esteem subjects make fewer internal attributions than low self-esteem subjects. The…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, College Students, Comparative Analysis, Individual Characteristics
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