Department of Psychology, Southern Methodist University, 75275, Dallas, Texas.
Mem Cognit. 1977 Jan;5(1):97-102. doi: 10.3758/BF03209199.
Two studies were designed to investigate the effects of prior information about plausible causes on subsequent attributions. In the Experiment 1, prior information was given about an internal and an external cause. It was predicted and found that the stronger an expectancy for a behavior, the more the behavior would be attributed to the cause that formed the basis of the expectancy. It was also predicted that (1) for facilitative causes, the stronger the expectancy based on a given cause, the less the behavior would be attributed to other causes (discounting), and (2)for inhibitory causes, the stronger the expectancy, the more the behavior would be attributed to other causes (augmenting). These predictions were not supported. It was suggested that discounting and augmenting did not occur because subjects had been given information about both causes which "locked in" their attributions to each cause. To test this explanation, a second study was undertaken in which observers were given information about only one cause. The results of Experiment 2 indicated that discounting and augmenting may only occur for attributions to causes about which no prior information is available.
两项研究旨在探讨有关可能原因的先验信息对后续归因的影响。在实验 1 中,提供了关于内部和外部原因的先验信息。研究预测并发现,对行为的期望越强,行为就越归因于形成期望基础的原因。还预测了 (1) 对于促进性原因,基于给定原因的期望越强,行为归因于其他原因(折扣)的就越少,以及 (2) 对于抑制性原因,期望越强,行为归因于其他原因(增强)的就越多。这些预测没有得到支持。研究认为,折扣和增强不会发生,是因为被试已经获得了关于两种原因的信息,这使得他们将归因锁定在每种原因上。为了验证这一解释,进行了第二项研究,其中观察者仅获得了关于一种原因的信息。实验 2 的结果表明,折扣和增强可能仅在归因于没有先验信息的原因时才会发生。