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About this book
First published in 1998. This study explains addiction in terms of social psychological processes, looks at the fundamental nature of addiction and its causes, pharmacology, attribution and volitional theories, as well as a context for drug problems.
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Yes, you can access Myth of Addiction by John Booth Davies in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Psychology & Addiction in Psychology. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
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1
Attribution Theory: Explaining Explanation
Attribution theory is a general title for a body of theory and research into the ways in which people explain why things happen. By and large the bulk of the work has confined itself to the explanations that people offer for various types of human behaviour, rather than the behaviour of objects, animals or natural forces, and this preoccupation probably reflects Western conceptions and values about the nature of the world. For religious and other reasons, we tend to view ourselves as the focus or centre of the Universe, or as the high point of creation, and hence attribution theory has concentrated on the explanation of human behaviour to the relative neglect of other things. It is clear that from other cultural perspectives, which see humans as part of a larger purposive universal process with a will and/or direction of its own, attribution theory would take a different and rather interesting turn; for example, certain central precepts would simply not make sense from such a perspective (Jahoda 1979).
Nonetheless, within our own cultural framework, attribution theory has offered important insights into the ways in which people explain their own actions and the actions of others; and in the course of that process light has coincidentally been shed on the difference between causal explanations as social constructions (reasons) and causal explanations as scientific statements (causes).
For example, the âreasonâ for a particular action is frequently a verbal statement made by an individual when asked a question by a third party, such as âWhy did you do this?â, or âWhy did she do that?â. In answering the question the motives, affiliations, intentions and self-perceptions of the person doing the explaining are often reflected in the type of explanation offered. This is regularly seen in party political broadcasts, when members of a governing party explain unpopular policies by reference to circumstances beyond their control; perhaps making use of sentences that begin, âWe in the XXXXXXX party had no choice but to do this becauseâŚâŚâ. On the other hand, popular policies will be explained by reference to internal qualities such as compassion, concern or goodness, and an explanation might lead with, âWe in the XXXXXXX party did this because we felt it was high time that something was done to help the situation ofâŚâŚâ. Such explanations are easily seen to be primarily social constructions with clear purposes and functions for the person doing the explaining; specifically, the avoidance of blame and the accumulation of personal credit.
By contrast, within our idealised conception of science (see for example the Logical Empiricist view of science advanced by Popper 1959) the question âWhy does water turn to steam when it boils?â is presumed to elicit a scientific statement of âcausalityâ that is independent of the motives, intentions and self-perceptions of the scientist doing the explaining (an assumption that is by no means true â see for example Kuhn 1970). From this idealised scientific viewpoint, it is assumed that different scientists will offer the same causal account regardless of their own motives, dispositions and propensities; that the explanation will represent the state of knowledge rather than the state of the explainer; and that in some sense the explanation offered will be ârealâ or âabsoluteâ.
Unfortunately, we sometimes lose sight of the distinction between causal accounts that are socially functional, and those which are scientifically functional, and the two become intermingled. Thus we may try to shed light on the causes of theft amongst drug users by asking them to tell us their reasons for stealing; or to investigate the causes of relapse amongst alcohol abusers by asking them their reasons for relapsing. In other words, we can fall into the trap of assuming that reasons provide a shortcut to discovering causes. Even more problematic is the fact that sometimes it is difficult to know which type of account we are dealing with, and that in real-life situations the two may be closely interwoven.
However, by becoming involved in this discussion of social versus scientific explanations we have to some extent jumped the gun. Originally, attribution theory sought to shed light on the nature of peopleâs explanations for everyday events without distinguishing between the social nature of reasons and the scientific nature of causes. These were lumped together under a general banner of âcausal explanationsâ, and it is to this earlier work that we must now turn in order to grasp the fundamental principles of attribution.
The Bases of Attribution Theory
Several accounts of the multi-faceted pedigree of attribution theory are available for the reader wishing to go into more detail than is provided in this chapter. Two of the best are given by Antaki (1982), and by Hewstone (1983) and it is worthwhile highlighting the salient features from these accounts.
The basis for attribution theory is the desire to understand how people arrive at common-sense explanations for their own and for others behaviour. The original stimulus for the work came from Heider (1958) in a much-cited work, The Psychology of Interpersonal Relations, in which it was suggested that a major task for anyone trying to understand the social and physical world was to produce satisfactory accounts of why things happened. Insofar as this applied to understanding why people do the things they do, this amounted to finding satisfactory causal accounts of behaviour; and furthermore, since searching for explanations is something that scientists do, this amounted to regarding people as if they were in some sense natural or primitive psychologists. From this basis, the idea of man as a naive scientist began to emerge, this notion deriving from the accumulating evidence that people made inferences about the causes of human behaviour on the basis of their observations of social acts, in the way that the scientist or physicist makes inferences on the basis of observations of physical events. The task then became one of finding out how such causal inferences were made, and illuminating the kinds of evidence involved in the process.
More importantly however these causal inferences, âdescribing and predicting events as a science should doâ (Hewstone op cit), were held to have important implications for behaviour whether they were âtrueâ or not. With respect to addiction, for example, this would imply that belief in the inability of addicts to control their own drug use, would have important behavioural implications whether such a belief were true or not.
Attribution as Lawful Explanation
Subsequent to Heiderâs original ideas, Jones and Davis (1965) are usually credited with making the next major step forward with their theory of âcorrespondent inferencesâ. This theory sought to explain how far a personâs actions could be accounted for in terms of the traits, dispositions and intentions of the person doing the act (known in attributional parlance as the âactorâ), rather than in terms of situational or other âexternalâ factors. The empirical work on this topic centred around âcommon and non-common effectsâ, and the reader is referred to either of the two texts cited above for an explanation of these terms.
However, the development by Kelley (1967) of the ANOVA model of causal inference merits closer inspection within this present text, because it presents a very clear picture of the type of thinking which can underlie the construction of causal explanations of human action. The model conceptualises the causal attribution process as hinging around the covariation of three dimensions, the title of this theoretical approach (the âANOVAâ model of attribution) deriving from a loose analogy with analysis of variance. Kelleyâs approach is particularly useful as it illustrates one of the central features of attribution theories in a very graphic and comprehensible manner; namely, the fact that the explanation postulated for some action results from the way in which that situation is perceived by the person constructing the causal account (the âobserverâ).
Kelleyâs formulation of the attributional process was first revealed in a widely-read paper presented at the Nebraska Symposium on Motivation, in 1967. He proposed that the type of explanation a person is likely to offer for an observed piece of social behaviour depends on the interaction (the âcovariation and configurationâ) of three factors. At risk of doing some violence to the original conceptions, the three factors Kelley proposed were in essence:
i) consensus â given that I have seen this person doing this thing, are other people doing it also? To the extent that the answer is âyesâ, there is high consensus. If ânoâ, there is low consensus.
ii) consistency â does this person do this thing repeatedly, or regularly? To the extent that the answer is âyesâ there is high consistency. If the behaviour is rare or a single instance, there is low consistency.
iii) distinctiveness â consider the object of this behaviour. Usually, this is the person who is having this thing done to them. Is he/she the sole recipient, or do other people have this done to them also? To the extent that the object person is unique, there is high distinctiveness. To the extent that he/she is only one of a number who receive this treatment, there is low distinctiveness.
It is important to bear in mind that information about consensus, consistency and distinctiveness can come to the observer through channels other than direct observation. Regardless of Heiderâs, Jones and Davisâs, or Kelleyâs original intentions, the general model does not in principle appear to require first hand information, but can be applied to reported information, or even to beliefs or preconceptions (referred to in the literature as âcausal schemataâ) formed in the absence of literal multiple observations. Whilst attribution theorists sometimes conceptualise such a situation as one of incomplete data, this is perhaps misleading if we thereby conclude that the resulting causal account must, as a consequence, necessarily be less powerful or persuasive than one based on direct observation. In fact a persons beliefs about, say, the consistency of an act (for example, that âalcoholicsâ inevitably relapse after one drink) can be plugged into the model as readily as can direct observations, where their influence will be as powerful as direct observations if the beliefs in question are sufficiently strongly held.
Whilst the detailed explication of Kelleyâs system can become almost as complex as one wishes to make it, a process involving independent consideration of âpersons, entities, and timeâ and their interactions, in practice it is easy to elucidate at a basic level in the following way.
Suppose we observe one day that Tom is hitting Mary, and that we have information available (of whatever type â observations, second-hand reports, stereotypes, prejudices etc.) about the pattern of consensus, consistency and distinctiveness surrounding this act. For example, it is just Tom who hits Mary (low consensus), he seems to hit Mary quite often (high consistency) and he also hits other girls (low distinctiveness). In these circumstances, we are likely to explain the event in terms of a negative property of Tom; he is aggressive, unpleasant, a bully, and so forth.
Imagine, however, that our information suggests high consensus (other children also hit Mary); high consistency (they hit her often); and these children are not generally noted for hitting other people (high distinctiveness). In these circumstances, we are likely to attribute the act to some disposition of Mary; perhaps for example there is something she repeatedly does that tests everyoneâs patience. Whatever the truth of the matter, we are likely to attribute the behaviour to a negative property of Mary.
Developing the above lines of argument, it is easy to conceptualise the Tom-hits-Mary scene in tabular form as follows, with each of the three variables being potentially high (HI) or low (LO), leading thereby to particular types of explanations for the observed act.
TOM HITS MARY. | |||
consensus | HI | or | LO |
consistency | HI | or | LO |
distinctiveness | HI | or | LO |
Using Kelleyâs three dimensions, we have seen how the pattern LO, HI, LO leads to explanation in terms of negative attributions about Tom; whilst HI, HI, HI leads to negative attributions about Mary. It is amusing and instructive to consider other alternatives, and to try and predict the type of explanation which might be forthcoming. Some patterns are quite easy, others are more subtle. For example, HI, LO, HI implies that there are particular situations in which Mary gets on everyoneâs nerves (i.e. a person x situation interaction); and LO, LO, HI suggests that the incident was due to some unfortunate and unforeseeable circumstance.
These simple examples based on Kelleyâs notions serve to illustrate two of the general points made earlier. Firstly, people construct explanations of social behaviour in a manner which is psychologically dynamic rather than primarily veridical. In fact, the attribution process has nothing to say on the issue of whether explanations constructed in these terms are true or not. Secondly, the process also appears to be lawful, Kelley suggesting a way of conceptualising it in terms of three major building blocks out of which explanation is formed in a logical or quasi-logical fashion.
Viewed in this way, social explanation is not based on any knowledge of actual causality, but is an inference made on the basis of certain social features of the act about which the observer has information of some kind. Consequently, the account might be âtrueâ or not. In addition, as we shall see later, this approach is not specific to the explanation of other peopleâs behaviour, since there is research indicating that the explanation of our own actions can also be handled within the attributional perspective.
The Work of Michotte and Heider on the Perception of Causality
In tracing the development of attribution theory, however, it is useful to go back to Heider and consider the influence of Gestalt psychology and specifically certain experiments by Michotte (1946) into âphenomenal causalityâ which clearly influenced Heiderâs thinking. In the cited studies, Michotte was primarily interested in perceptual processes, notably visual perception. Within that historical context, the word perception retained its classical meaning and was considered to be distinct from cognition. It certainly had none of the social-cognitive implications of more modern usages as embodied in phrases like âinterpersonal perceptionâ. Nonetheless, Michotteâs studies elegantly illustrate the manner in which perception and cognition are closely intertwined.
Michotte investigated the ways in which people perceived causality. His experiments used visual stimuli consisting of combinations of blobs, circles, squares and lines which appeared to move in certain ways; Michotte achieving his visual effects by means of revolving discs on which were drawn distorted circles, only portions of which could be observed through a slot. ...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- Dedication
- Preface to the Second Edition
- Prologue
- 1. Attribution Theory: Explaining Explanation
- 2. Attribution Theory and Attributional Research
- 3. Volitional and Non-Volitional Explanations
- 4. Addiction, Withdrawals and Craving
- 5. Pharmacology and Compulsion
- 6. The Problem of âAddictive Substancesâ
- 7. Disease as the Preferred Explanation for âBadnessâ
- 8. The Nature of the Evidence: Methodological Problems
- 9. Attribution: A Dynamic Approach to How People Explain Their Actions
- 10. Functional Explanations for Drug Use
- 11. A Context for Drug Problems
- References
- Index