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Related Concept Videos

Fundamental Attribution Error01:14

Fundamental Attribution Error

According to some social psychologists, people tend to overemphasize internal factors as explanations—or attributions—for the behavior of other people. They tend to assume that the behavior of another person is a trait of that person, and to underestimate the power of the situation on the behavior of others. They tend to fail to recognize when the behavior of another is due to situational variables, and thus to the person’s state. This erroneous assumption is called the fundamental attribution...
Theory of Attribution I: Correspondent Inference Theory01:15

Theory of Attribution I: Correspondent Inference Theory

Correspondent inference theory, proposed by Jones and Davis in 1965, seeks to explain how individuals infer stable personality traits from observed behaviors. It suggests that people attribute actions to underlying dispositions rather than external circumstances, particularly when the behavior appears intentional and socially significant.Voluntary Behavior and Dispositional AttributionAccording to this theory, individuals are more likely to attribute behavior to personal traits when it appears...
Attribution01:26

Attribution

In social interactions, individuals frequently seek to understand the motivations and causes behind others' behaviors. This fundamental aspect of social perception, known as attribution, plays a crucial role in shaping interpersonal relationships and guiding future actions. Attribution refers to the cognitive process through which people infer the reasons behind others' behaviors, allowing them to assess character traits, intentions, and situational influences.Attribution Theory and Its...
Theory of Attribution II: Kelley's Covariation Theory01:29

Theory of Attribution II: Kelley's Covariation Theory

Attribution theory plays a crucial role in social psychology, helping to explain how individuals interpret the causes of behavior. One prominent model within this field is Harold Kelley's covariation theory, which provides a systematic approach to determining whether internal traits or external circumstances drive a person's actions. The model posits that individuals rely on three key types of information—consensus, consistency, and distinctiveness—to make these judgments.Consensus: Comparing...
Factorial Design02:01

Factorial Design

Factorial Analysis is an experimental design that applies Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) statistical procedures to examine a change in a dependent variable due to more than one independent variable, also known as factors. Changes in worker productivity can be reasoned, for example, to be influenced by salary and other conditions, such as skill level. One way to test this hypothesis is by categorizing salary into three levels (low, moderate, and high) and skills sets into two levels (entry level...
Strategies for Assessing and Addressing Confounding01:25

Strategies for Assessing and Addressing Confounding

Confounding is a critical issue in epidemiological studies, often leading to misleading conclusions about associations between exposures and outcomes. It occurs when the relationship between the exposure and the outcome is mixed with the effects of other factors that influence the outcome. Given that, addressing confounding is of high importance for drawing accurate inferences in research.
Confounding can be addressed at both the design phase of a study and through analytical methods after data...

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Related Experiment Videos

Attribution as a Conditional Reasoning Step in Multifactorial Risk Analysis and Decision-Making.

Eytan Ellenberg1, Eldad Katorza1

  • 1Office of Medical Affairs, National Insurance Institute of Israel, Jerusalem, Israel.

Risk Analysis : an Official Publication of the Society for Risk Analysis
|July 13, 2026
PubMed
Summary

The FAIR framework offers a structured approach to attributing risk factors in complex systems. It guides decision-making by clarifying when to weigh individual contributions versus adopting systemic responses.

Related Experiment Videos

Area of Science:

  • Decision analysis
  • Risk management
  • Complex systems science

Background:

  • Decision-making in multifactorial risk domains necessitates prioritizing interacting contributors.
  • Current methods like statistical modeling and causal inference inadequately support weighing contributions under uncertainty.
  • Attribution, the assignment of interpretative weight to factors, is often under-formalized and prone to oversimplification.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To propose the FAIR framework (Framing factors, Assembling causal representations, Interpreting diagnostics, Reasoned attribution) for conceptualizing attribution as a conditional reasoning step.
  • To integrate explicit factor boundaries, domain-informed causal models, uncertainty diagnostics, and decision-oriented interpretation into a unified approach.
  • To identify when attribution should be avoided in favor of system-level responses in complex risk scenarios.

Main Methods:

  • The FAIR framework conceptualizes attribution as a conditional reasoning process, not solely a statistical output.
  • It involves defining factor boundaries, constructing causal representations informed by domain expertise, and interpreting diagnostic measures of separability and uncertainty.
  • The framework explicitly identifies conditions under which factor-level attribution is inappropriate, advocating for systemic approaches.

Main Results:

  • The FAIR framework highlights common attribution pitfalls, including multicollinearity and uncertainty dominance.
  • It clarifies the conditions under which factor-level attribution can responsibly inform governance, prioritization, and decision-making.
  • The framework distinguishes appropriate uses of attribution from situations demanding precautionary or systemic responses.

Conclusions:

  • Attribution should be viewed as epistemically conditional and action-oriented, strengthening the link between risk analysis and decision-making.
  • The FAIR framework promotes transparent and responsible governance in complex risk systems by reducing over-interpretation.
  • It guides users to appropriately apply factor-level attribution or adopt system-level responses based on the nature of the risk and uncertainty.