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Peer reviewedHirschfeld, Lawrence A. – Cognition, 1997
Responds to John J. Kim's critique of his studies of preschoolers' understanding of race. Maintains that his and others' investigations demonstrate that preschoolers differentiate the pattern of causal reasoning governing transmission and maintenance of racial characteristics from that governing transmission and maintenance of perceptually similar…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Causal Models, Childhood Attitudes, Cognitive Development
Peer reviewedPillow, Bradford H.; Lovett, Suzanne B. – Merrill-Palmer Quarterly, 1998
Traced emergence of elaborated framework of belief-desire reasoning. Preschoolers and adults were asked to explain why a story protagonist searched for a desired object in an incorrect location. Results suggest that, during late preschool years, conception of cognitive activities as contributing to knowledge and belief becomes integrated into…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Attribution Theory, Child Development, Cognitive Development
Peer reviewedCourtin, Cyril – Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education, 2000
The ability to attribute false beliefs by 155 deaf children (ages 5 and 8) grouped by communication mode and parental hearing status was compared to that of 39 hearing children (ages 4 to 6). Effective representational abilities were demonstrated by deaf children of deaf parents, whereas those with hearing parents appeared delayed, with…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Beliefs, Children, Cognitive Development
Peer reviewedAnamuah-Mensah, J. – International Journal of Science Education, 1998
Attempts to explore the extent of native science beliefs among students in secondary and tertiary institutions. Premise is based upon the assumption that the way in which individuals respond to traditional causal statements is indicative of their native science beliefs. Reveals that these beliefs are held by a substantial portion of students. (DDR)
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Concept Formation, Cultural Context, Cultural Influences
Peer reviewedKotovsky, Laura; Baillargeon, Renee – Cognition, 1994
Examined whether infants believe that size of a moving object striking a stationary object will affect how far the stationary object is displaced. Found that the infants did believe the size of the test cylinder affected the length of the test object's displacement and that they used the initial familiarization event to calibrate their predictions…
Descriptors: Adults, Attribution Theory, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Psychology
Peer reviewedMacKinnon-Lewis, Carol; And Others – Developmental Psychology, 1994
Assessed mothers' and their seven- to nine-year-old sons' hostile attributions about one another and the coerciveness of their relationships. Obtained ratings of the sons' aggression and peer acceptance and of family life events. Subjects' hostile attributions were related to the coerciveness of their interactions. Boys who reported more stressful…
Descriptors: Aggression, Attribution Theory, Children, Hostility
Peer reviewedBurks, Virginia Salzer – Merrill-Palmer Quarterly, 1996
Explored similarities between social-cognitive representations of relationships of mothers and their fourth- and fifth-grade children. Subjects responded to a series of hypothetical social dilemmas involving peer and family contexts. Found that maternal and child cognitions are related, but the relations are highly dependent upon the component of…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Children, Family Relationship, Interpersonal Relationship
Peer reviewedMacKinnon-Lewis, Carol; Castellino, Domini R.; Brody, Gene H.; Fincham, Frank D. – Social Development, 2001
Investigated concurrent and longitudinal relations between attributions and negative behavioral interactions between 177 fathers and young adolescents. Found that children's attributions about father played a significant role in negative interactions within and across time. Father's earlier negative interactions with their children predicted…
Descriptors: Adolescent Attitudes, Aggression, Attribution Theory, Early Adolescents
Peer reviewedHenry, John W.; Campbell, Constance R. – Sex Roles: A Journal of Research, 1999
Examined gender differences in the consistency of attributions over time, general attributional style, and explanations for performance in a college course. Student surveys showed no differences in general attributional style by gender, nor interactions between gender and accuracy in predicting course performance on participants' perceptions of…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Attribution Theory, College Students, Higher Education
Peer reviewedArmbrister, Robin C.; McCallum, R. Steve; Lee, Hee Do – Psychology in the Schools, 2002
American and Korean fourth- and fifth-graders were administered the Student Social Attribution Scale (SSAS), designed to assess students' explanations for social successes and failures. Results reveal that Korean children showed significantly higher Failure Effort scores and American children showed significantly higher Success Ability scores.…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Cross Cultural Studies, Failure, Foreign Countries
Ziegler, Albert; Stoeger, Heidrun – High Ability Studies, 2004
This report is an evaluation of an attributional retraining intervention conceptualized to promote girls gifted in the natural sciences. The attributional retraining was based on a modeling technique, and conceptualized for ninth-grade chemistry students attending a college preparatory high school (German Gymnasium). The aim of the training was to…
Descriptors: Females, Retraining, Models, Gender Differences
Assouline, Susan G.; Colangelo, Nicholas; Ihrig, Damien; Forstadt, Leslie – Gifted Child Quarterly, 2006
This study emerges from the lack of empirical research on gifted students' attributions about academic success and failure in multiple subject areas and school in general. We explored differences in top attributional choices between boys and girls for success and failure in general academics, language arts, science, and mathematics. Gifted…
Descriptors: Language Arts, Academically Gifted, Academic Achievement, Academic Failure
Beckers, Tom; De Houwer, Jan; Pineno, Oskar; Miller, Ralph R. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2005
Recent research suggests that outcome additivity pretraining modulates blocking in human causal learning. However, the existing evidence confounds outcome additivity and outcome maximality. Here the authors present evidence for the influence of presenting information about outcome maximality (Experiment 1) and outcome additivity (Experiment 2) on…
Descriptors: Perceptual Development, Causal Models, Attribution Theory, Psychological Studies
Hodgins, David C.; el-Guebaly, Nady – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 2004
A prospective design was used to explore the precipitants of relapse in a naturalistic sample of pathological gamblers (N = 101) who had recently quit gambling. Relapse rates were high; only 8% were entirely free of gambling during the 12-month follow-up. Relapses were highly variable but occurred most frequently in the evening, when the person…
Descriptors: Gender Differences, Recidivism, Self Destructive Behavior, Predictor Variables
Shah, Dhavan V.; Kwak, Nojin; Schmierbach, Mike; Zubric, Jessica – Human Communication Research, 2004
This research considers how distinct news frames work in combination to influence information processing. It extends framing research grounded in prospect theory (Tversky & Kahneman, 1981) and attribution theory (Iyengar, 1991) to study conditional framing effects on associative memory. Using a 2 x 3 experimental design embedded within a…
Descriptors: Probability, Urbanization, Information Processing, Attribution Theory

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