将推断的原因和解释归因于行为

G. Moskowitz, Irmak Olcaysoy Okten, Alexandra Sackett
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引用次数: 0

摘要

行为是一个人的意图、态度、目标、信仰和欲望的反映。这些个人内部因素与环境提供的机会以及他们所处的环境和文化规范对个人施加的感知限制相协调。此外,一个人的意图、态度、目标、信仰和欲望在任何时候都不为人所知,因为它们存在于那个人的思想中,所以几乎总是不为感知那个人的人所知。为了了解别人,我们必须观察并识别/分类他们的行为,然后根据观察到的行为,推断和判断那个人的内部状态,作为他们行为背后的动力。这篇文章探讨了归因的过程。Heider将归因描述为一个过程,这个过程决定了“一个人对另一个人的想法和感觉,他如何看待他,他对他做了什么,他期望他做什么或想什么,他对另一个人的行为有什么反应。”该条目探讨了人们为了理解行为而遵循的规则,以及程序的理性与非理性本质。即使在高度激励理性思考的情况下,这个过程也可能存在偏见,并且在归因过程中可能出现缺陷,例如由于文化,经验或个性导致的感知者之间的长期差异。如果这个过程是准确和纯粹理性的,那么它将如何展开,这与它在有偏见的情况下如何展开形成对比。我们如何感受,我们如何选择行动,都来源于我们如何理解这个世界。因此,归因过程是理解我们的感受、建立期望和计划如何行动的基础。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Attributing Inferred Causes and Explanations to Behavior
Behavior is a reflection of the intentions, attitudes, goals, beliefs, and desires of a person. These intra-individual factors are coordinated with what opportunities the situation affords and the perceived constraints placed on the person by their context and the norms of the culture they are in. Further, the intentions, attitudes, goals, beliefs, and desires of a person are often not known to them in any given moment, and because they reside within the mind of that person they are almost always not known to the people who are perceiving that person. To know anything about other people we must observe and identify/classify their behavior and then attribute to the observed behavior inferences and judgments about the internal states of that person serving as the motivating force behind their behavior. This entry explores this process of attribution. Heider described attribution as the process that determines “how one person thinks and feels about another person, how he perceives him and what he does to him, what he expects him to do or think, how he reacts to the actions of the other.” The entry explores the rules that people follow in order to make sense of behavior, and the rational versus non-rational nature of the procedure. Even when highly motivated to think rationally, this process can be biased, and flaws can appear in the attribution process, such as from chronic differences among perceivers due to culture, experience, or personality. How the process would unfold if accurate and purely rational is contrasted with how it unfolds when biased. How we feel, and how we choose to act, are derived from how we make sense of the world. Thus, attribution processes are foundational for understanding how we feel, for establishing expectations, and planning how to act in turn.
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