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Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of the Perceived Intentionality and Stability of Another's Dependency on Helping Behavior

TLDR
In this article, a field experiment was conducted to investigate the effects on help-giving of the perceived intentionality and stability of the cause of a dependent person's need, and the results were discussed in terms of theorizing which has attempted to relate outcome attributions to helping behavior.
Abstract
A field experiment was conducted to investigate the effects on help-giving of the perceived intentionality and stability of the cause of a dependent person's need. Subjects were asked to lend class notes to a caller whose need for help was described as due either to a lack of ability ("unintentional" dependency) or to a lack of effort ("intentional" dependency). The cause of the caller's dependency was also varied according to its perceived degree of stability (stable vs. unstable). As predicted, more help was elicited (1) when the caller's dependency was attributed to a lack of ability rather than to a lack Df effort, and (2) when the dependency was seen as stable rather than unstable. The results are discussed in terms of theorizing which has attempted to relate outcome attributions to helping behavior.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Gender and Helping Behavior. A Meta-Analytic Review of the Social Psychological Literature

TL;DR: According to the social role theory of gender and helping as mentioned in this paper, the male gender role fosters helping that is heroic and chivalrous, whereas the female gender role fosterers helping behavior that is nurturant and caring.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Cognitive (Attribution)-Emotion-Action Model of Motivated Behavior: An Analysis of Judgments of Help-Giving.

TL;DR: This article examined the relation of causal attributions and affect to judgments of help-giving and found that attributions to internal controllable factors maximize negative affect (disgust and anger) and promote avoidance behavior.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mental health stigma as social attribution: Implications for research methods and attitude change.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe how an attribution model advances research questions related to mental health stigma in three areas: (1) Stigma research needs to examine signaling events related to psychiatric stigma including the label of mental illness, behaviors associated with psychiatric symptoms, and physical appearance; (2) Research into mediating knowledge structures needs to bridge information about controllability attributions with public attitudes about dangerousness and self-care.
Journal ArticleDOI

On sin versus sickness. A theory of perceived responsibility and social motivation.

TL;DR: This general theory of social motivation explains some reactions to stigmatized persons as well as observations related to help giving, peer rejection, and aggression.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Compliance without pressure: The foot-in-the-door technique.

TL;DR: Significant evidence is produced that greater external pressure generally leads to greater compliance with the wishes of the experimenter, and the one exception appears to be situations involving the arousal of cognitive dissonance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Resistance to improper dependency relationships

TL;DR: In this paper, two hundred and twentyeight college men and women were individually assigned to supervise the work of two same-sex peers who were eligible for a cash prize although no prize was available for the subject.