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Laurent Brun; Pascal Pansu; Benoit Dompnier – Educational Psychology, 2024
Over the past fifty years, extensive research has examined the influence of causal attributions on cognitions, emotions, and behaviours in educational contexts. However, these studies often relied on inferences about dimensional properties of attributions, and not on students' perceptions of them. This study innovates by directly assessing these…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Failure, Success, Student Attitudes
Fenigstein, Allan – 1981
Research has established a reliable relationship between self-awareness and causal attribution, i.e., heightened attention toward the self increases attributions of responsibility to the self. It was hypothesized that increased availability or accessibility of self-related cognition would increase causal attributions to the self, although this…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Style, Etiology
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
Schwarz, Norbert; Clore, Gerald L. – 1981
The role of affect in information processing has recently received attention, and several possible influences of affect have been suggested. The informational and directive effects of affect were investigated with subjects (N=61) who either described events in their recent past that made them feel good, described events that made them feel bad, or…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Affective Measures, Attribution Theory, Cognitive Processes
The Attribution of Universal or Personal Helplessness in Nondepressed and Depressed Elderly Females.
Maiden, Robert J. – 1981
The potential for feelings of hopelessness and depression in the aged is well documented. Although studies have examined the role of perceived control in ameliorating depression in the institutionalized elderly, no research has actually measured the perceived causal attributions among depressed, hopeless and/or institutionalized elderly…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Cognitive Processes, Depression (Psychology), Failure

Forsyth, Nancy L.; Forsyth, Donelson R. – Journal of Counseling Psychology, 1982
Tested the theoretical basis for using attributional interpretations by giving individuals who had received a negative social evaluation no information or information that stressed internal/controllable, internal/uncontrollable, external/controllable, and external/uncontrollable causes. Results indicated stressing internal/controllable causes…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Attribution Theory, Cognitive Processes, College Students
Mower, Judith C. – 1980
The interactive effects of implicit normative and explicit situational consensus information were examined regarding the processes of causal attribution and evaluation. Stimulus items were single sentence descriptions of antisocial and prosocial behaviors representing the extremes of high and low normative consensus in each behavior category, as…
Descriptors: Antisocial Behavior, Attribution Theory, Behavior Theories, Cognitive Processes
Ly, Tran M.; Hodapp, Robert M. – Mental Retardation: A Journal of Practices, Policy and Perspectives, 2005
Parents' attributions of the jigsaw-puzzle performance of their child with Prader-Willi syndrome (n = 20) or Williams syndrome (n = 21) were examined. Parents in both groups placed more importance on internal versus external attributions. Parents of children with Prader-Willi syndrome exhibited a hedonic bias by attributing their child's success…
Descriptors: Parent Attitudes, Children, Puzzles, Cognitive Processes

Doyne, Elizabeth; And Others – Journal of Clinical Psychology, 1981
Assessed reliability and validity for an instrument designed to assess depressiform cognitions. The results suggest that the scale is promising, however, a strong sex effect was noted in some of the characteristics of attribution. Suggests the need to evaluate sexual-cultural differences in attributional processes associated with depression.…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Cognitive Processes, College Students, Depression (Psychology)
Corbett, Pamela D.; Rich, Alexander R. – 1981
Efforts to understand mediating and maintaining factors associated with dysfunction of alcoholics have produced competing explanations and conflicting, overlapping constructs. To clarify the relationship between mental health and attributional patterns among women, the attributional patterns of alcoholic, depressed, and control females in response…
Descriptors: Achievement, Alcoholism, Attribution Theory, Cognitive Processes
Osberg, Timothy M.; Shrauger, J. Sidney – 1981
Research has provided support for the existence of certain actor-observer and self-serving biases in individuals' retrospective analyses about the causes of behavior. A question that has been relatively unexplored deals with whether the findings on actor-observer differences and the self-serving pattern in attributions are generalizable to…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Behavior Patterns, Bias, Cognitive Processes
Brunson, Bradford I. – 1980
Systematic investigations have verified the existence of a number of behavioral manifestations of the "Type A" behavior pattern. For example, brief exposure to salient uncontrollable stress has led to enhanced performance by Type A's on a subsequent task, whereas prolonged exposure has lead to performance deterioration. The ongoing experiences of…
Descriptors: Adults, Attribution Theory, Behavior Patterns, Cognitive Processes
McCallum, Debra Moehle; And Others – 1983
Interpersonal power has been defined as the ability of an agent to alter the behavior of a target through means-control, attractiveness, and credibility. To identify and delineate situations of influence in personal relationships, undergraduate students either wrote influence descriptions (N=96), made similarity judgments on the original 96…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Behavior Change, Cognitive Processes, College Students

Ames, Carole – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1984
Fifth and sixth graders performed at a high or low level on a novel achievement task within a competitive or individual goal structure. The type and frequency of children's thoughts were assessed. Children made more ability attributions in the competitive condition and more effort attributions in the individual condition. (Author/BS)
Descriptors: Academic Ability, Affective Measures, Attribution Theory, Classroom Environment
Weiner, Bernard – 1981
A set of prevalent emotions, including pity, anger, guilt, pride (self-esteem), gratitude, and resignation, shares a common characteristic, i.e., causal attributions appear to be sufficient antecedents for their elicitation. Research in the field of emotions has shown that the underlying properties or dimensions of attributions are the significant…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Attribution Theory, Cognitive Processes, Emotional Response
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