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Why was I rejected? How the attributed reason for social rejection impacts subsequent behavior

Posted on:2010-06-18Degree:M.AType:Thesis
University:East Tennessee State UniversityCandidate:Nelson, Brian CFull Text:PDF
GTID:2444390002976764Subject:Psychology
Abstract/Summary:
It is proposed that differences in rejection attribution could yield variations in subsequent prosocial behavior. To test the attribution hypothesis, 109 participants were randomly assigned to a performance based rejection, a personally based rejection, or a control condition and then worked with an ostensible partner via the Internet to develop uses for a common household item. Prosocial behavior was measured by the number of uses a participant generated (working harder for the team). When generating creative uses, participants in the rejection conditions performed significantly worse than nonrejected participants (F(2,74) = 4.576, p<.05, r2=.11). However, in contradiction to the attribution hypothesis, participants in the 2 rejection conditions did not differ in performance. Explanations for why the rejection attribution hypothesis was not supported are discussed in addition to directions for future research regarding rejection attribution.
Keywords/Search Tags:Rejection, Attribution hypothesis
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