SFB 504 discussion paper
99-70
-
Dagmar Stahlberg
Lehrstuhl fuer Sozialpsychologie, Sonderforschungsbereich 504
Seminargebaeude A5, D-68131 Mannheim
dstahlberg@sowi.uni-mannheim.de
Sabine Sczesny
Lehrstuhl fuer Sozialpsychologie der Universitaet Mannheim
Seminargebaeude A5, D-68131 Mannheim
ssczesny@sowi.uni-mannheim.de
Stefan Schwarz
Sonderforschungsbereich 504
L 13, 15, D-68131 Mannheim
schwarz@sfb504.uni-mannheim.de
Exculpating Victims and the Reversal of Hindsight Bias- Abstract:
- This experiment examines the role of the hindsight bias and of motivational forces such as the motive to believe in a just world as possible causes
of the derogation of victims effect in the context of rape. The hindsight
bias is the tendency of people to falsely believe that they would
have predicted the outcome of an event once the outcome is known.
Participants read descriptions of an interaction between a man and
a woman that ended with one of four possible outcomes: The woman was
raped with very severe consequences for her future life vs. rape with
only minor consequences for her future life vs. no rape (assailant
was forced to retreat by the strong defense of the victim) vs. no
outcome information. To test motivational predictions the hindsight
bias and the derogation effect were analyzed as a consequence of the
sex of participants, the seriousness of the consequences of the rape,
the belief in a just world and the acceptance of rape myths. Results
supported the assumption that derogation effects are at least partly
driven by hindsight bias and that motivational processes work via
the hindsight bias. However, in this study we did not find a classical
hindsight bias but a reversed hindsight bias: Especially female participants
in the severe consequences of rape condition and those participants
who did not accept rape myths rated the likelihood of rape in the
rape outcome condition as smaller than participants in the no outcome
information control group. They also derogated the victim less than
participants in the no information control group. These effects were
interpreted in terms of self-serving or in-group serving functions
of the hindsight bias. Finally no support was found for the assumption
that derogation effects are driven by the motive to believe in a just
world.
- Keywords:
- JEL-Classification:
- Project:
- A6 Stahlberg
- Creation date:
- 1999-06-23
- Publication Status
- Downloadable version
- none
- Download titlepage for internal use only
pdf-file
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