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| I've had some people tell me they don't know what a flute looks like, so here is a pic just in case. |
Every summer before the school year started we had band camp
to learn our new marching show and music.
One day there was a big commotion amongst some of the band members. This type of behavior was typical; however
this time our director was involved, which of course meant something bad (or
good if you like drama) happened. During
the commotion I was only able to hear the director asking one of our flutists if
he had washed his mouth out. A few
moments later I found out that one of my fellow flutists (Mr. K) played a prank
on another flutist (Mr. G). Can you
guess the prank? In turned out that, Mr. K had peed on and in the head joint
(see above image) of Mr. G’s flute, but that was not where the prank
stopped. Mr. K and some other band mates
then decided to let Mr. G play his flute.
As soon as he began playing, Mr. G noticed something was off, which is
when Mr. K decided to tell him that he had urinated on the head joint. Thus,
concluding the prank.
Up until this point, I had not
really interacted with Mr. K to know anything substantial about him. But after
hearing about this ‘prank’, I was appalled and immediately wrote him of as a
jerk (among other negative adjectives), especially since Mr. G was a friend of
his.
After today’s lecture about
attributions theories, I learned that by making this personal attribution of
Mr. K being a jerk I was using the theory of correspondent inferences.
According to Jones and Davis’ (1965)
theory of correspondent inferences,
people try to determine if other’s behavior corresponds to a stable
characteristic of their personality.
Because people are attempting to link observed behavior to a person’s
personality, they are essentially making a personal attribution.
There are three factors that allow people to
make such personal attributions (Jones & Davis, 1965).
The first factor focuses on the extent to
which the person had a choice because freely chosen behavior is more
informative in determining a person’s personality than is assigned behavior or
not freely chosen behavior.
The second
factor is the expectedness of the behavior.
Specifically, behavior that is unexpected is more informative than
behavior that is expected.
The last
factor is the consequences of the behavior. That is, acts that have more
positive consequences tells us less about a person’s personality than do acts
that have one positive consequence.
During my attribution of Mr. K, I
relied on the first and second factor.
First, Mr. K willing chose this route as his prank when there were tons
of other routes that he could have taken.
According to the first factor, his free choice in urinating on the flute
should be informative to me.
Secondly,
not taking sexual fetishes into consideration, it is typically not socially
acceptable for people to urinate on other people’s private property, especially
property that will be going near a person’s mouth.
Furthermore, we were expected to behave like respectable
young adults while in band.
Therefore,
because Mr. K’s behavior deviated from what one would expected, his behavior
should be informative to me as I attempt to make an attribution.
Taken together, Mr. K’s choice in pulling
this prank and his breaking of norms lead me to make the attribution that he
was a jerk and disgusting, an attribution that did not really diminish with
time.
(n = 572)
_____________________________
Jones, E.E., & Davis, K. E. (1965). From acts to dispositions: The
attribution process in person perception. Advances
in Experimental Psychology, 2,
219-266.
As a fellow band geek, I approached your experience some a slightly different perspective. There is no arguing that what Mr. K did was immature and disgusting, but from a person-perception perspective I thought about how his actions affected the impression he made from other people. I don’t know how things were at your high school, but my high school band was an incredibly tight knit group of people and you would basically see everyone in band constantly. And as social psychology has taught us, impressions are persistent, and therefore difficult to change. Not only does the theory of correspondent inferences come into play, in which many band members would associate one negative trait with a slew of others, but I think the perseverance effect also comes into play here. Even if Mr. K proves in some way that he is not actually an immature and disgusting prankster, many people will continue to believe he is because of this instance. Sucks for him.
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