Dispositions, scripts, or motivated correction? Understanding ideological differences in explanations for social problems.
- 1 August 2002
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by American Psychological Association (APA) in Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
- Vol. 83 (2), 470-487
- https://doi.org/10.1037/0022-3514.83.2.470
Abstract
Research has consistently found that liberals and conservatives generate different attributions for the causes of social problems and respond differently to people who have internal-controllable causes for needing help. Five studies using a variety of methods (the "college bowl" paradigm, the attitude-attribution paradigm, 2 surveys with nationally representative samples, and an experiment that assessed attributional judgments under varying levels of cognitive load) explored whether these differences could be explained by (a) underlying dispositional differences in the tendency to see the causes of behavior as personally or situationally located, (b) ideological scripts, or (c) differences in the motivation to correct personal attributions. Results were most consistent with the motivated correction explanation. The findings shed further light on the cognitive strategies and motivational priorities of liberals and conservatives.Keywords
This publication has 61 references indexed in Scilit:
- Perspective-taking: Decreasing stereotype expression, stereotype accessibility, and in-group favoritism.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 2000
- Providing public assistance: Cognitive and motivational processes underlying liberal and conservative policy preferences.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1993
- Beliefs concerning the features of constrained behavior: A basis for the fundamental attribution error.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1990
- Trends in Whites' Explanations of the Black-White Gap in Socioeconomic Status, 1977-1989American Sociological Review, 1990
- Is the Attitude-Attribution Paradigm Suitable for Investigating the Dispositional Bias?Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 1988
- Reasoning Chains: Causal Models of Policy Reasoning in Mass PublicsBritish Journal of Political Science, 1986
- The moderator–mediator variable distinction in social psychological research: Conceptual, strategic, and statistical considerations.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1986
- Is there a disposition to avoid the fundamental attribution error?Journal of Research in Personality, 1985
- Consequences of prejudice against the null hypothesis.Psychological Bulletin, 1975
- Social Attitudes and Social ClassBritish Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology, 1971