<--- Back to Details
First PageDocument Content
Cognitive biases / Psychology / Belief / Social psychology / Attribution bias / Attribution / Fundamental attribution error / Actorobserver asymmetry / Dispositional attribution / False-consensus effect / Social perception / Correspondent inference theory
Date: 2005-08-14 12:46:16
Cognitive biases
Psychology
Belief
Social psychology
Attribution bias
Attribution
Fundamental attribution error
Actorobserver asymmetry
Dispositional attribution
False-consensus effect
Social perception
Correspondent inference theory

Microsoft PowerPoint - Attributions&RelationshipsBW

Add to Reading List

Source URL: wilderdom.com

Download Document from Source Website

File Size: 280,82 KB

Share Document on Facebook

Similar Documents

Drug Ratings: DOCTORS SAY PEER RATINGS CHANGE THEIR PERCEPTION OF DRUGS In May 2017, the leading global social network for doctors launched SERMO Drug Ratings – the first and only global peer-to-peer drug review system

DocID: 1vjj3 - View Document

Social Sciences RISK PERCEPTION AND ACCEPTANCE OF THE AMERICAN CROCODILE (CROCODYLUS ACUTUS) IN SOUTH FLORIDA JODIE L. SMITHEM

DocID: 1ve3I - View Document

The Public’s Perception of Humanlike Robots: Online Social Commentary Reflects an Appearance-Based Uncanny Valley, a General Fear of a “Technology Takeover”, and the Unabashed Sexualization of Female-Gendered Robot

DocID: 1uxFx - View Document

Review More Than Meets the Eye: Split-Second Social Perception Jonathan B. Freeman1,* and Kerri L. Johnson2

DocID: 1tkmj - View Document

Rural Broadband Expansion in the United States: Citizen Perception as a Social Process1 Dawn Nafus Intel Labs

DocID: 1rTnX - View Document