Abstract

The present study investigated the effects of depression on causal attributions for success and failure. Specifically, female university students were separated into depressed and nondepressed groups on the basis of Costello--Comrey Depression Scale scores, and then received either 20%, 55%, or 80% reinforcement on a word association task. Following the task, attributions were made for outcome using the four factors of effort, ability, task difficulty, and luck. In accord with predictions generated from a self-serving biases hypothesis, nondepressives made internal (ability, effort) attributions for a successful outcome (80% reinforcement) and external attributions (luck, task difficulty) for a failure outcome (20% reinforcement). As predicted from consideration of the self-blame component of depression, the attributions made by depressives for a failure outcome were personal or internal. Contrary to expectations, depressives also made internal attributions for a successful outcome. The findings for depressives were discussed in relation to the recently revised learned helplessness model of depression, which incorporates causal attributions. For nondepressives, the findings were considered in terms of the self-serving biases hypothesis.

Keywords

AttributionPsychologyLuckLearned helplessnessBlameOutcome (game theory)Task (project management)Attribution biasDevelopmental psychologyReinforcementSocial psychologyDepression (economics)Clinical psychology

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

Publication Info

Year
1978
Type
article
Volume
36
Issue
3
Pages
236-246
Citations
212
Access
Closed

External Links

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

212
OpenAlex

Cite This

Nicholas A. Kuiper (1978). Depression and causal attributions for success and failure.. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology , 36 (3) , 236-246. https://doi.org/10.1037/0022-3514.36.3.236

Identifiers

DOI
10.1037/0022-3514.36.3.236