9.2
Q1: What is the fundamental attribution error?
The fundamental attribution error is the tendency to overestimate the impact of personal disposition and underestimate situational factors when explaining others' behavior. For example, observers might assume a homeless person is lazy rather than considering external circumstances like a natural disaster that destroyed their home. This bias leads people to make dispositional attributions—attributing behavior to character traits—while overlooking the powerful influence of the situation.
Q2: Why do people blame victims for their misfortune?
The just-world hypothesis—the belief that people deserve their outcomes—combined with the fundamental attribution error leads to victim blame. People assume poor individuals are lazy rather than considering situational factors like unemployment, recession, or limited educational opportunities. This dispositional explanation ignores structural barriers and perpetuates negative stereotypes about vulnerable populations, affecting attitudes toward unemployed individuals and abuse victims.
Q3: How does the quizmaster study demonstrate the fundamental attribution error?
In the quizmaster study, questioners created difficult questions they knew the answers to, giving them an obvious situational advantage. Yet contestants and observers rated questioners as more intelligent, making internal attributions despite the clear situational influence. Both groups overlooked that the questioner's role—not superior knowledge—explained the performance difference, illustrating how powerfully the fundamental attribution error shapes judgment.
Q4: What is the self-serving bias and how does it differ from the fundamental attribution error?
The self-serving bias causes people to make internal attributions for their successes and external attributions for their failures, protecting self-esteem. Unlike the fundamental attribution error, which applies to others' behavior, self-serving bias applies to one's own behavior. When you ace an exam, you credit your intelligence; when you fail, you blame the test difficulty. This reversal protects personal disposition from threatening explanations.
Q5: Do all cultures commit the fundamental attribution error equally?
No. People from individualistic cultures, such as the United States and Canada, show the greatest tendency to commit the fundamental attribution error because they emphasize individual achievement and personal disposition. In contrast, people from collectivistic cultures, common in East Asia and Latin America, are less likely to make this error because they focus on group relationships and situational context, providing a broader perspective on behavior.
Q6: How can perspective-taking reduce the fundamental attribution error?
Taking another person's perspective allows for stronger appreciation of situational factors rather than falling prey to dispositional attributions. When you consider the circumstances someone faces—especially if they are a stranger—you become more aware of external influences on their behavior. This empathetic approach helps counteract the automatic tendency to overestimate personality and underestimate the situation's role in shaping actions.
Q7: What three dimensions help explain how people make attributions?
Attribution theory proposes three dimensions: locus of control (internal versus external), stability (stable versus unstable), and controllability (controllable versus uncontrollable). Locus of control determines whether behavior stems from personal traits or circumstances. Stability refers to whether conditions are likely to change. Controllability addresses whether circumstances can be controlled. These dimensions shape how people explain outcomes, particularly through self-serving bias when attributing sports team wins and losses.
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