The Effect of Result Publicity on Self-Serving Attributional Bias:A Social Comparison Perspective

Shanshan Wen

Front. Bus. Res. China ›› 2018, Vol. 12 ›› Issue (1) : 3-14.

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Front. Bus. Res. China ›› 2018, Vol. 12 ›› Issue (1) : 3-14. DOI: 10.1186/s11782-018-0028-8
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The Effect of Result Publicity on Self-Serving Attributional Bias:A Social Comparison Perspective

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Abstract

Self-serving bias suggests that people tend to attribute success to internal factors and attribute failure to external factors (Bradley, J Pers Soc Psychol 36:56–71,1978; Miller and Ross, Psychol Bull 82:213–225,1975). However, the results of the attribution of failure are not always consistent. Some studies have found that people attribute failure to external factors (Snyder, Stephan, & Rosenfileld, 1976) and others suggest that people attribute failure to internal factors (Ross et al., J Pers Soc Psychol 29:609–618,1974). I tested self-serving bias in two different contexts in mainland China: in one, test results were public (students had access to each other’s test results) and in the other, test results were private (students only had access to his/her own results). When a context triggers individuals to compare themselves to others, individuals may alter their attribution of failure in order to preserve their self-image and selfesteem. Data were analyzed by repeated measure ANOVA, and the results show that in a public context people tend to attribute failure more to external factors than to themselves. Also, results suggest that people attribute failure less to themselves in a public context than in a private context.

Keywords

Self-serving bias / Failure attribution / Success attribution / Public context / Private context / Internal attribution / External attribution

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Shanshan Wen. The Effect of Result Publicity on Self-Serving Attributional Bias:A Social Comparison Perspective. Front. Bus. Res. China, 2018, 12(1): 3‒14 https://doi.org/10.1186/s11782-018-0028-8

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