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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
Anderson, Craig A.; And Others – 1981
Attribution theory suggests that attributional styles may contribute to the motivational and performance deficits frequently observed in depressed and lonely populations. An Attributional Style Assessment Test (ASAT) was created and administered to college students, along with the Beck Depression Inventory and the UCLA Loneliness Scale.…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Cognitive Style, Depression (Psychology), Environmental Influences
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