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The Journal of psychology · Oct 2009
Reactions to others' mistakes: an empirical test of fairness theory.
- Kevin J Williams and Jessica M Nicklin.
- University of Hartford, Department of Psychology, 200 Bloomfield Avenue, West Hartford, CT 06117, USA. jn0702@gmail.com
- J Psychol. 2009 Oct 1; 143 (5): 533-58.
AbstractDrawing on fairness theory (R. Folger & R. Cropanzano, 1998, 2001), the authors examined undergraduates' reactions to advisor mistakes made in an academic advisement scenario. The authors hypothesized that perceived fairness, blame, and behavioral intentions to address wrongdoing would be influenced by outcome severity and the nature of the mistake (knowledgeable mistakes vs. ignorant mistakes; errors of commission vs. errors of omission). Results partially supported the hypotheses. Participants perceived scenarios as less fair and expressed higher intent to address the wrongdoing when the consequences were high in severity and when a knowledgeable person made the mistake. Participants attributed significantly more blame to the advisor in the high severity outcome conditions. Counterfactual thoughts mediated the effects of target knowledge but not outcome severity. The authors discuss theoretical and practical implications.
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