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Home > Attributional bias


Attributional biases are cognitive biases which affect attribution -- the way we determine who or what was responsible for an event or action.

Such biases typically rely on actor/observer differences, which is the way people involved in an action and those outside of it view things differently.

Often they are caused by asymmetry in availability (frequently called " salience " in this context). The behavior of actors is easier to remember than the background settings; or, our own inner turmoil is more available to ourselves than it is to others. As a result, our judgments of attribution are often distorted along those lines.

In some experiments, for example, subjects were shown only one side of a conversation or were able to see one of the faces of the conversational participants. Whomever the subjects had a better view of were judged by them as being more important, influential, and having a greater role in the conversation.

Interestingly, there is some evidence that more intelligent and socially apt people are more likely to make errors in attribution.

The most well-known and representative example of an attributional bias is the fundamental attribution error.

Attributional biases include:

See also: attribution theory, causal oversimplification, causalityThe philosophical concept of Causality or Causation refers to the set of all particular "causal" or "cause-and-effect" relations. The Differentia (distinguishing properties/characteristics) of Causality which all causal relations have in common: The relat, list of cognitive biasesCognitive bias is distortion in the way we perceive reality (see also cognitive distortion). Some of these have been verified empirically in the field of psychology, others are considered general categories of bias. anchoring anthropic bias attribution, a

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