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Attribution theory - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Attribution theory is a social psychology theory developed by Fritz Heider, Harold Kelley, Edward E. Jones, and Lee Ross. The theory is concerned with the ways in which people explain (or attribute) ...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attribution_theory |
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Attribution (psychology) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Attribution is a concept in social psychology referring to how individuals explain causes of events, other's behavior, and their own behavior. Heider argued that, as an active perceiver of the events...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attribution_(psychology) |
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Dispositional attribution - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dispositional attribution is the explanation of individual behavior as a result caused by internal characteristics that reside within the individual, as opposed to outside (situational) influences th...
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Situational variation is important for how people understand and interact with mobile technology. This variation is an input to the processes by which people disentangle the internal (personal or device) and external (situational) causes of ... Fiedler, K., Walther, E., & Nickel, S. (1999). Covariation-based attribution:
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Attribution of a behavior to some external cause or factor operating in the situation; an external attribution.
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Dimensions of appearance attribution related to traditionality, sociability, for mality, and strength were identified through factor analysis. A two-way multivar iate analysis of variance (MANOVA) was used to analyze male and female attri butions toward each appearance style on these dimensions.
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As one can see, comparing the percentage of temporary to dispositional and situational, situational attribution shows much higher (41% compared to 3%);
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