Motivation and emotion/Book/2022/Fundamental attribution error and emotion

Overview
The fundamental attribution error describes perceivers’ tendency to underestimate the impact of situational factors on human behaviour and to overestimate the impact of dispositional factors” – Bertram Gawronski, 2007

History
Fundamental attribution error was created in 1977 by social psychologist Lee Ross – Bertram Gawronski, 2007

Jones and Harris (1967) hypothesised that people would attribute free-chosen behaviours to dispositions – Dr Saul McLeod, 2018

Case studies
Two studies attempted to document the occurrence of the psychological phenomenon known as the fundamental attribution error (FAE) in the audiovisual medium.

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15213260701286049?casa_token=WwstKfNS3U8AAAAA%3AOEZS5f44GIHHRVwQ7HbGebE0vxJL49PizTddf3dkDeUj5h3t4ARTxvTV5KOxHOoduzymSs2kiGE3IPg

Emotional and the ultimate attribution error: a case study on the influence of specific emotions (fear and anger) on the ultimate attribution error.

[https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12144-013-9164-7#:~:text=Emotion%20and%20the%20Attribution%20Biases&text=The%20fundamental%20attribution%20error%20is,of%20others%20(Ross%201977). https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12144-013-9164-7#:~:text=Emotion%20and%20the%20Attribution%20Biases&text=The%20fundamental%20attribution%20error%20is,of%20others%20(Ross%201977).]

Counterarguments against fundamental attribution error
“The actor-observer hypothesis (which is closely linked to the fundamental attribution theory) is neither firmly established, nor robust” – Bertram F Malle, 2006.