John H. Harvey has written: 'New Directions in Attribution Reseach. Volume 3 (Hard) (New Directions in Attribution Research)' 'Social psychology' -- subject(s): Social psychology 'New Directions in Attribution Research. Volume 1' -- subject(s): Attribution (Social psychology) 'Attribution'
Attribution is a concept in social psychology. The attribution theory is a term for many models that explain the processes.
Bonnie L. Haines has written: 'Bigger than the box' -- subject(s): Attribution (Social psychology), Impression formation (Psychology), Stereotype (Psychology)
Miles Hewstone has written: 'La Atribucion Causal' 'An introduction to social psychology' -- subject(s): Social psychology, PSYCHOLOGY / Social Psychology 'Self and Social Identity (Perspecitves on Social Psychology)' 'Attribution Theory'
At times, absolutely. It is always best to perform your own analysis when responding to Psychology discussions. Does this response create a fundamental attribution error by either the submitter or responder's part?
Jochen Haisch has written: 'Selbstattribution und Verhalten' -- subject(s): Attribution (Social psychology), Causation
Jean-Claude Deschamps has written: 'Des attitudes aux attributions' -- subject(s): Attribution (Social psychology), Social change, Social psychology, Social values
Fundamental attribution error describes the scenario in which the subject overestimates the effect of personality and in turn underestimates external situational factors. It is an error present in social psychology.
Guido Kempter has written: 'Das Bild vom Anderen' -- subject(s): Attribution (Social psychology), Social perception
Nancy Jo Magnusson Fagan has written: 'The socialization of attributions of performance' -- subject(s): Attribution (Social psychology)
Not for Attribution was created on 2008-01-20.
In psychology, FAE stands for the Fundamental Attribution Error. This refers to the tendency for people to attribute the behavior of others to internal factors (e.g., personality traits) while ignoring external factors (e.g., situational influences). It can lead to misunderstandings and misjudgments in social interactions.