Attribution Theory & Person Perception (College Board AP® Psychology): Exam Questions

10 mins4 questions
1
1 mark

A manager reviews an employee's poor quarterly report and immediately concludes the employee is lazy and incompetent, without considering that the employee had been managing an unusually heavy workload and a family crisis during that period.

Which of the following best describes the manager's thinking?

  • Self-serving bias

  • Fundamental attribution error

  • Actor-observer bias

  • The just-world hypothesis

2
1 mark

A social psychologist conducted a study to examine how people explain their own successes and failures. Eighty university students completed a series of 20 anagram puzzles. After finishing, participants were told (randomly and regardless of actual performance) that they had either succeeded or failed on the task.

Participants then completed a questionnaire asking them to explain their performance. Explanations were coded as either internal (e.g., ability, effort) or external (e.g., task difficulty, luck). The results are shown in the table below.

Outcome told to participant

Internal attribution (%)

External attribution (%)

Success

79

21

Failure

28

72

Based on the data in the table, which of the following concepts do the results most directly illustrate?

  • Self-serving bias

  • The fundamental attribution error

  • The actor-observer bias

  • Cognitive dissonance

3
1 mark

In study 1, participants explained their own success or failure on an anagram task. Results showed:

Outcome told to participant

Internal attribution (%)

External attribution (%)

Success

79

21

Failure

28

72

In study 2, different participants watched a video of another person failing the same anagram task. They attributed that person's failure primarily to low ability rather than task difficulty.

Comparing these two studies, which of the following concepts best explains why people attribute their own failures to external factors but attribute others' failures to internal factors?

  • The fundamental attribution error

  • Self-serving bias

  • The actor-observer bias

  • Confirmation bias