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Using Confluence Theory to Make Unusual Predictions about Desire, Expectation, and Intention Attributions
Author(s) -
Stephen Rice,
David Trafimow,
Rian Mehta
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
journal of social science studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2329-9150
DOI - 10.5296/jsss.v3i2.8505
Subject(s) - attribution , social psychology , psychology , confluence , computer science , programming language
The intention attribution literature suggests that a success or a failure by a skilled person will result in a large difference in the intentions others will attribute to that person, but that this effect will be attenuated dramatically if the person is unskilled. The received literature is less clear about what to predict for desire attributions or expectation attributions. Based on a recent theory, the confluence theory (Trafimow, 2009), we predicted very little attenuation for desire attributions and only moderate attenuation for expectation attributions. These findings were confirmed across six experiments. Together, the experiments suggest an attenuation continuum where the attenuation effect increases as attributions pertain to variables more proximal to actual behavior.

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