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Journal ArticleDOI

Judgment of contingency in depressed and nondepressed students: sadder but wiser?

TLDR
In this article, the learned helplessness theory of depression was used to predict the degree of contingency between responses and outcomes relative to the objective degree of contingencies, and the predicted subjective judgments of contingency were surprisingly accurate in all four experiments.
Abstract
SUMMARY How are humans' subjective judgments of contingencies related to objective contingencies? Work in social psychology and human contingency learning predicts that the greater the frequency of desired outcomes, the greater people's judgments of contingency will be. Second, the learned helplessness theory of depression provides both a strong and a weak prediction concerning the linkage between subjective and objective contingencies. According to the strong prediction, depressed individuals should underestimate the degree of contingency between their responses and outcomes relative to the objective degree of contingency. According to the weak prediction, depressed individuals merely should judge that there is a smaller degree of contingency between their responses and outcomes than nondepressed individuals should. In addition, the present investigation deduced a new strong prediction from the helplessness theory: Nondepressed individuals should overestimate the degree of contingency between their responses and outcomes relative to the objective degree of contingency. In the experiments, depressed and nondepressed students were presented with one of a series of problems varying in the actual degree of contingency. In each problem, subjects estimated the degree of contingency between their responses (pressing or not pressing a button) and an environmental outcome (onset of a green light). Performance on a behavioral task and estimates of the conditional probability of green light onset associated with the two response alternatives provided additional measures for assessing beliefs about contingencies. Depressed students' judgments of contingency were surprisingly accurate in all four experiments. Nondepressed students, on the other hand, overestimated the degree of contingency between their responses and outcomes when noncontingent outcomes were frequent and/or desired and underestimated the degree of contingency when contingent outcomes were undesired. Thus, predictions derived from social psychology concerning the linkage between subjective and objective contingencies were confirmed for nondepressed students but not for depressed students. Further, the predictions of helplessness theory received, at best, minimal support. The learned helplessness and self-serving motivational bias hypotheses are evaluated as explanations of the results. In addition, parallels are drawn between the present results and phenomena in cognitive psychology, social psychology, and animal learning. Finally, implications for cognitive illusions in normal people, appetitive helplessness, judgment of contingency between stimuli, and learning theory are discussed.

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Journal Article

Judgements of a 2 × 2 contingency table: Sequential processing and the learning curve.

TL;DR: This paper showed that the subjects' tendency to overestimate high-density zero contingencies did not arise because the game was so difficult that it interfered with processing the events, but rather from associative models derived from animal learning.
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Territory, Rank and Mental Health: The History of an Idea

TL;DR: In this article, the authors trace the development of ideas about the relation of mood to social rank and territory and suggest that elevated mood enabled a person to rise in rank and cope with the increased activities and...
Book ChapterDOI

Animal Analogues of Causal Judgment

TL;DR: This chapter reviews that nonverbal behavioral assessment of causal judgment is apt to be more veridical than is verbal assessment, which is compromised by the demand characteristics and ambiguities of language.
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Painful truths about depressives' cognitions

TL;DR: Experiments consistently find that depressed people suffer significantly less cognitive distortion than do both normals and nondepressed psychiatric patients.
Journal ArticleDOI

The impact of decision support system features on user overconfidence and risky behavior

TL;DR: An experimental study examines three DSS features that are generally considered beneficial to the user and hypothesizes and confirms that, controlling for the effect of actual performance, overconfidence increases user satisfaction with the decision-making process and outcome.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of reward or reinforcement on preceding behavior depend in part on whether the person perceives the reward as contingent on his own behavior or independent of it, and individuals may also differ in generalized expectancies for internal versus external control of reinforcement.
Journal ArticleDOI

Self-efficacy: Toward a unifying theory of behavioral change☆☆☆

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present an integrative theoretical framework to explain and predict psychological changes achieved by different modes of treatment, including enactive, vicarious, exhortative, and emotive sources.