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Patch, Michael E.; Stahelski, Anthony J. – 1987
Previous research provides support for two distinct models of expectation behavior in experimental games. The similarity pattern describes expectations that are similar to the actor's behavior regardless of whether the actor is cooperative or competitive. The triangularity pattern describes expectations that are both similar and dissimilar to…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Behavior Patterns, College Students, Competition
Kessler, Ronald P. – 1984
John Bowlby's theory of affectional bonding and the reformulated learned helplessness theory of depression were integrated into a multivariate model in order to expand the breadth of current attributional theories of depression. This retrospective study focused upon the quality of parent-child relations, the types of discipline parents employed,…
Descriptors: Affection, Attachment Behavior, Attribution Theory, College Students
Murdock, Nancy L.; And Others – 1987
Clients' causal explanations for their psychological difficulties have received significant notice in the research literature. In contrast, few studies have focused on the attributions formulated by counselors regarding their clients' difficulties. Attributional approaches to counseling suggest that both client and counselor attributions can…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Client Characteristics (Human Services), College Students, Counseling Techniques
Bauer, Allison – 1987
This study investigated the reformulated theory of learned helplessness, centering around attributional style in the cause of cognitive and emotional deficits. Subjects (N=58) were undergraduate and graduate psychology students at the University of Alabama at Huntsville. Subjects were divided into an experimental group (N=30) who received…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Cognitive Style, College Students, Depression (Psychology)
Elbel, Jacquelyn; Horton, Irene P. – 1983
Attribution theorists have argued that if an intrinsically motivated activity is extrinsically reinforced, the activity will be devalued and extinguished when the reward is removed. Hypothesizing that activities performed for their instrumental outcome are valued less than activities not so externally oriented, and that activities performed for…
Descriptors: Activities, Attribution Theory, College Students, Higher Education
San Nicolas, Gregg C.; Moore, Mary W. – 1989
The research project described in this paper concerned the application of attribution theory and its underlying principles to the consultation process and activities of special and regular education teachers. In recent years, consultation between teachers for the "mainstreaming" of disabled and/or handicapped students into general education has…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Consultants, Elementary Education, Junior High Schools
Allen, Thomas E. – 1982
Continuing motivation has been defined as an individual's willingness to return to a task or task area at a subsequent time, in similar or varying circumstances, without visible external pressure to do so, and when other behavior alternatives are available. In the current study, path models from Weiner's theory of motivation were developed to…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students, Expectation
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
Crase, Darrell – 1981
This selected bibliography lists many of the contemporary resources on suicide and its varied dimensions representing the health sciences, social sciences, and medicine. The materials include books, periodical literature, dissertations, audiovisuals, journals, and a list of related professional organizations. In addition to a general discussion of…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Adults, Attribution Theory, Counseling Techniques
Quintanar, Leo R.; Pryor, John B. – 1982
The tendency for individuals to reduce their own efforts when others are available to respond has been called "social loafing." Social loafing has been found also to characterize collective endeavors on tasks considered cognitively efffortful. To test the hypothesis that reduced cognitive effort related to the presence of a coacting group would…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Cognitive Processes, College Students, Diffusion (Communication)
Madigan, Robert; Bollenbach, Amy – 1982
The cognitive theory of depression advanced by Beck proposes that a negative view of the self, the world and the future is a condition that is responsible for depression. Recent data, however, have suggested that the relationship between cognition and affect is a reciprocal one in which each influences the other. Temporary mood states were induced…
Descriptors: Affective Objectives, Attribution Theory, Cognitive Processes, College Students
Gabrenya, William K., Jr. – 1982
Growing interest in self-presentation has spawned several examinations of individual differences in the tendency to manage one's impressions, notably Snyder's attempt to identify skilled impression managers through self-monitoring and an associated monitoring device, the Self-Monitoring Scale (SMS). To further examine the SMS, factor analyses were…
Descriptors: Adults, Anxiety, Attribution Theory, Behavior Patterns
Valdez, Roberta L. – 1985
A differentiation between two types of self-blame, behavioral and characterological, has been suggested. Behavioral self-blame is control-related and pertains to attributions made to one's behavior, while characterological self-blame is esteem-related and involves attributions made to one's character. To assess the efficacy of separating the…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Battered Women, Behavior, Family Violence
Sedlak, Andrea J. – 1984
Many questions about how couples construe violence between intimate partners remain unanswered. In order to examine the "labeling" of violence, attitudes about intimate violence, and victims' reactions to assault, 125 undergraduate students completed a three-part questionnaire, including a Battering Empathy Scale (BES), a section…
Descriptors: Attitude Measures, Attribution Theory, Battered Women, College Students
Schunk, Dale H.; Gunn, Trisha P. – 1985
This study explored how task strategies and attributions for success during cognitive skill acquisition influenced self-efficacy and skillful performance. Fifty children aged 9 to 10 who lacked division skills received instruction and practice opportunities. Task strategies were assessed by recording children's verbalizations while they solved…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Division, Educational Research, Elementary Education
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