Holism and Causal Responsibility: The Role of Number and Valence of Event Consequences

The present research examines the effect of holistic-analytic thinking style on causal responsibility. Across seven studies ( = 4,103), participants' thinking style was either measured or manipulated. Then, the valence or number of consequences varied in several scenarios involving a cause-cons...

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Veröffentlicht in:Personality & social psychology bulletin 2023-08, p.1461672231192827-1461672231192827
Hauptverfasser: Santos, David, Requero, Blanca, Martín-Fernández, Manuel
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The present research examines the effect of holistic-analytic thinking style on causal responsibility. Across seven studies ( = 4,103), participants' thinking style was either measured or manipulated. Then, the valence or number of consequences varied in several scenarios involving a cause-consequence relationship. As a dependent measure, participants indicated the degree of responsibility attributed to the cause mentioned in each scenario. The results revealed that holistic (vs. analytic) participants assigned more responsibility to the cause when the consequences presented were a combination of positive and negative outcomes (vs. univalent), and when multiple (vs. single) consequences were triggered in the scenario. To explore the explanatory factor for these results, a final study manipulated the complexity of the consequences, along with the number. The results of this research suggested that holistic (vs. analytic) individuals consider the degree of complexity of consequences to establish causal attribution.
ISSN:0146-1672
1552-7433
DOI:10.1177/01461672231192827