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Intuitions About Situational Correction in Self and OthersKatherine Whiteaffiliation not provided to SSRN Akiko KamadaNihon University Thomas Gilovichaffiliation not provided to SSRN Leaf Van BovenUniversity of Colorado Boulder 2003 Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, Vol. 85, pp. 249-258, 2003 Abstract: People’s attributional phenomenology is likely to be characterized by effortful situational correction. Drawing on this phenomenology and on people’s desire to view themselves more favorably than others, the authors hypothesized that people expect others to engage in less situational correction than themselves and to make more extreme dispositional attributions for constrained actors’ behavior. In 2 studies, people expected their peers to make more extreme dispositional inferences than they did themselves for a situationally constrained actor’s behavior. People’s expectation that they engage in more situational correction than their peers was diminished among Japanese participants, who have less desire to view themselves as superior to their peers (Study 3), and among participants who were led to view dispositional attributions more favorably than situational attributions (Study 4).
Number of Pages in PDF File: 10 Accepted Paper SeriesDate posted: February 18, 2010Suggested CitationContact Information
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