Title: Attribution, Learned Helplessness, Depression
1Attribution,Learned Helplessness,Depression
2Attributions Understanding the Behavior of Others
- Kelleys (1965) Attribution Theory
- Person Dimension Consensus
- Situation Dimension Consistency
- Entity (Stimulus) Dimension Distinctiveness
- Fundamental Attribution Error
- A tendency to prefer person attributions over
situational explanations - An error compared to what attribution theory
predicts - Not always found in all cultures
3Attributions Understanding Our Own Behavior
- Kelleys analysis can be applied to the self
- In the specific case of task performance, another
attributional analysis - Weiner (1974) argued that an attributional
analysis of ones own performance was - Organized by locus of causality
- Internal (person cause)
- External (situation cause)
- And by degree of stability
- Stable (likely to remain constant over time)
- Unstable (likely to change from time to time)
4Performance Attributions
Internal External
Stable Ability Task Difficulty
Unstable Effort Luck
5Performance Attributions Failure
Internal External
Stable Im no good at this That test was ridiculously difficult
Unstable I didnt try hard enough Im sick one day, and thats half of the test!
6Performance AttributionsSuccess
Internal External
Stable Im really good at this That test was really easy
Unstable All that hard work finally paid off I forgot to read a chapter, but none of it was on the test!
7Performance Attributions and Task Persistence
- Self-serving bias
- We are more willing to take credit for success
than for failure - Compared to attributions for others in identical
situations - An example of attributions being affected by how
much we like various explanations - Motivated reasoning Finding a rational way to
reach the conclusions we desire - Cognitive Dissonance Theory
8Deprivation of Control, Learned Helplessness
Theory, and Depression
9Explanation, Prediction, and Control Deprivation
- Many theorists assume that the desire for control
is a fundamental aspect of human nature - A motivational view of this desire assumes that
one can have too little or too much control over
events
10Control Deprivation
- In the case of too little control
- The less control one has had lately, the more one
should want to get control in the future - But a finding that seemed to be counter to this
expectation was reported by Overmier and Seligman
(1967)
11Control Deprivation
- Findings from studies on avoidance learning
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14Learned Helplessness TheorySeligman (1975)
- When a person learns to be helpless (i.e., learns
that outcomes are independent of responses),
three deficits result - Motivational (less willing to exert effort, to
try) - Emotional (depression)
- Cognitive (less likely to recognize changes that
make control possible)
15Attributional Reformulation of Learned
Helplessness TheoryAbramson, Seligman,
Teasdale (1978)
- These deficits, in humans, tend to result from
particular kinds of attributions - In addition to Weiners analysis, Abramson,
Seligman Teasdale suggested one more dimension - Globality
- The extent to which the explanation for one event
is generalized to many, most, or all other events
16Attributional Reformulation of Learned
Helplessness TheoryAbramson, Seligman,
Teasdale (1978)
Local Local Local
Internal External
Stable Ability Task Difficulty
Unstable Effort Luck
Global Global Global
Internal External
Stable Ability Task Difficulty
Unstable Effort Luck
17Attributional Reformulation of Learned
Helplessness TheoryAbramson, Seligman,
Teasdale (1978)
Local Local Local
Internal External
Stable Ability Task Difficulty
Unstable Effort Luck
Global Global Global
Internal External
Stable Ability Task Difficulty
Unstable Effort Luck
18Mood Disorders
19Mood
- Feeling state
- Longer, less intense than emotion
- No triggering stimulus required
20Major Depressive Disorder
- 2 Weeks with one of
- Extremely sad or depressed mood state
- Anhedonia loss of pleasure/interest in usual
activities
21Major Depressive Disorder
- Four of
- 1) Significant weight loss or gain
- 2) Insomnia or hypersomnia
- 3) Psychomotor retardation or agitation
- 4) Fatigue or loss of energy
- 5) Feelings of worthlessness or extreme,
inappropriate guilt - 6) Trouble concentrating, thinking, making
decisions - 7) Recurrent thoughts of death or suicide
22MDD Prevalence
- Lifetime Prevalence
- About 8 of population
- Lifetime prevalence could be as high as 25 for
women and 12 for men
23Etiology The Diathesis-Stress Model
- Diatheses (Vulnerabilities, Predispositions)
- Stable individual difference variables
- E.g., Genes, personality
- Stress
- Minor hassles
- Negative life events
- Positive life events
24Diathesis-Stress Model
25Stressors
- Marriage and Interpersonal Relationships
- Romantic relationship breakups
- Family conflicts
- Health problems
- Housing, living problems
- Work