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Introduction. II. The Paradigmatic Cases. A. Peterson v. Hewlett-Packard. 1. Peterson Facts. 2. Peterson Law. 3. Peterson Negotiations-What Went Wrong. 4. Peterson Fall Out. B. Parker v. Hurley. 1. Parker Facts. 2. Parker Law. 3. Parker Negotiations-What Went Wrong. 4. Parker Fall Out. C. Startzell v. City of Philadelphia. 1. Stratzell Facts. 2. Stratzell Law. 3. Stratzell Negotiations-What Went Wrong. 4. Stratzell Fall Out. III. Why Mediation?. A. A Primer on Mediation. B. The Attributes of Mediation That Enable It to Resolve Disputes Between Gay Rights and Religious Liberties. 1. Mediation Addresses Psychological Barriers to Agreement. a. Attribution Error. b. Partisan Perceptions. c. Loss Aversion. 2. Fostering Understanding and Complicating Views of Identity. a. Identity as an Ob...
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Without delving into the complex arguments taking place in fields like cognitive psychology and behavioral economics, a working definition of "bounded rationality" that serves our purposes as campaign researchers is that voters are capable of considering a limited amount of information about candidates and they consider just enough information to reach a decision that satisfies them. [...] this misunderstanding of the situational nature of decision-making is so widespread and so misleading, that it has its own name - it is called the fundamental attribution error.
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Psychologists refer to it as fundamental attribution error and self-serving bias.
It's why when you cut someone off in traffic, it's because you're running late. But when they cut you off, they're a jerk.
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... the psychological tendency called ``attribution error,'' contributes to unnecessarily prolonging t...
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In a recent investigation of consumer complaining, Bolkan and Daly (2007) found that consumer complaints were mitigated by organizational response types (excuses, justifications, and apologies) and their components (believability, appropriateness, consideration, and accepting responsibility). What remained to be explained was if organizations' remediation tactics differed in the minds of consumers of services and products. The current study sought to determine if consumers of services and products differ in their perceptions of organizational remediation messages. Results showed two major patterns reoccurred throughout. First, assuming responsibility was less important for service-based failures than it was for product-based failures. Second, alleviating negativity was easier to do for ...
... may be subject to the fundamental attribution error (Jones and Nisbett, 1971). That is, when com...
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... the psychological tendency called ``attribution error,'' contributes to unnecessarily prolonging t...
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... how leaders' perceptual/attributional errors concerning a given set of issues and political act...
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NEW YORK - New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd has admitted to using a paragraph virtually word-for-word from a prominent liberal blogger without attribution.
Dowd acknowledged the error in an e-mail to the Huffington Post on Sunday, the Web site reported. The Times corrected her column online to give proper credit for the material to Talking Points Memo editor Josh Marshall.
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NEW YORK - New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd has admitted to using a paragraph virtually word-for-word from a prominent liberal blogger without attribution.
Dowd acknowledged the error in an e-mail to The Huffington Post on Sunday, the Web site reported. The Times corrected her column online to give proper credit for the material to Talking Points Memo editor Josh Marshall.
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...(12) Furthermore, studies in causal attribution have shown that people conflate blameworthy behavi...Dripps, Fundamental Retribution Error: Criminal Justice and the Social Psychology of Bla...