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Lecture notes

Error and Biases Week 2

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Covers: - The fundamental attribution error - From FAE to correspondence bias - Bounded Rationality - Confirmation Bias - Anchoring - Framing - A critique of Heuristics and Biases










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Uploaded on
April 9, 2022
Number of pages
8
Written in
2020/2021
Type
Lecture notes
Professor(s)
Katja brodmann
Contains
Week 2

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Psychology and society week 2


The fundamental attribution error:

- People prioritize people over situations- see people first then their situation
- People tend to attribute cause to person- people are in their situation because of
them
- Person is the causal agent rather than other situational factors

Jones & Harris (1967)
• Correspondent Inference Theory:
• We infer dispositions from action where action is freely chosen
• Where action is not freely chosen, we do not infer dispositions
• Participants read student essay and infer author’s attitudes
• Direction of behavior: Pro-Castro vs Anti-Castro
• Choice: Free choice vs Required by course tutor

- People have positive attitudes towards action you freely chose
- Observers inferred pro-Castro attitude even where informed that author had no
choice over direction of essay
Ross (1977)
• ‘Naïve psychologists’ are prone to error
• Fundamental attribution error:
• ‘a general tendency to overestimate the importance of personal or
dispositional factors relative to environmental influences’ (p184)
- We tend to put more weight on person than other factor when attributing causality

Jones & Nisbett (1971):
- Actor-observer effect:
- The way people attribute cause to their behaviour differ from how observers
attribute cause
- Actor attributes causality to situational influences
- Observers attribute causality to actor’s dispositions
- Difference between actors and observers due to where attention is focused

Fundamental- rule of all humanity

, Psychology and society week 2




- Non-western culture may not be prone to FAE
- 70 Indian ppts, 60 US ppts
- Aged 8, 11, 15, or adult- effects of culture less pronounce in when younger
- Describe 2 prosocial and 2 antisocial behaviors, and why they occurred

- Adults in the US attribute greater causality to individuals
- Adults in India attribute greater causality to contextual factors
- Similar results for 15- year olds
- No difference in causal attributions among 8 and 11-year olds

- Important cultural differences in susceptibility to FAE
- Cultural differences are learned
- Occur between 11 and 15 years

Updating the FAE:
• Fundamental attribution error:
• ‘a general tendency, acquired through socialization into Western culture, for
observers to overestimate the importance of personal or dispositional factors
relative to environmental influences’
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