Causality and Blame Judgments of Negative Side Effects of Actions May Differ for Different Institutional Domains

Cognitive factors are known to influence lay assessments of causality and blame for negative side effects of intentional actions but specific social determinants of such assessments remain relatively unexplored. In a full-factorial, intraindividual experiment using two blocks of analogous vignettes...

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Main Authors: Inna F. Deviatko, Kirill A. Gavrilov
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2020-11-01
Series:SAGE Open
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244020970942
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spelling doaj-14737b2cbb584955abfa077b524c9cb92020-11-25T04:06:14ZengSAGE PublishingSAGE Open2158-24402020-11-011010.1177/2158244020970942Causality and Blame Judgments of Negative Side Effects of Actions May Differ for Different Institutional DomainsInna F. Deviatko0Kirill A. Gavrilov1Institute of Sociology of FCTAS RAS, Moscow, Russian FederationInstitute of Sociology of FCTAS RAS, Moscow, Russian FederationCognitive factors are known to influence lay assessments of causality and blame for negative side effects of intentional actions but specific social determinants of such assessments remain relatively unexplored. In a full-factorial, intraindividual experiment using two blocks of analogous vignettes constructed for two particular institutional action domains (“medical” and “corporate dress code”), we tested the propositions that causality and blame judgments differ between (a) domains and depend on (b) the type of action originator; (c) the type of damage; and (d) the “remoteness” of damage from the originator. Our data demonstrate a significant difference between two institutional action domains: actors in “medical”-related vignettes are generally estimated to be more causally effective and blameworthy than actors in “dress code”–related vignettes. In addition to the pronounced main effects of institutional domain as a factor influencing cause and blame judgments, we revealed few significant interaction effects of the latter with other experimental factors used for vignettes construction.https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244020970942
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Inna F. Deviatko
Kirill A. Gavrilov
spellingShingle Inna F. Deviatko
Kirill A. Gavrilov
Causality and Blame Judgments of Negative Side Effects of Actions May Differ for Different Institutional Domains
SAGE Open
author_facet Inna F. Deviatko
Kirill A. Gavrilov
author_sort Inna F. Deviatko
title Causality and Blame Judgments of Negative Side Effects of Actions May Differ for Different Institutional Domains
title_short Causality and Blame Judgments of Negative Side Effects of Actions May Differ for Different Institutional Domains
title_full Causality and Blame Judgments of Negative Side Effects of Actions May Differ for Different Institutional Domains
title_fullStr Causality and Blame Judgments of Negative Side Effects of Actions May Differ for Different Institutional Domains
title_full_unstemmed Causality and Blame Judgments of Negative Side Effects of Actions May Differ for Different Institutional Domains
title_sort causality and blame judgments of negative side effects of actions may differ for different institutional domains
publisher SAGE Publishing
series SAGE Open
issn 2158-2440
publishDate 2020-11-01
description Cognitive factors are known to influence lay assessments of causality and blame for negative side effects of intentional actions but specific social determinants of such assessments remain relatively unexplored. In a full-factorial, intraindividual experiment using two blocks of analogous vignettes constructed for two particular institutional action domains (“medical” and “corporate dress code”), we tested the propositions that causality and blame judgments differ between (a) domains and depend on (b) the type of action originator; (c) the type of damage; and (d) the “remoteness” of damage from the originator. Our data demonstrate a significant difference between two institutional action domains: actors in “medical”-related vignettes are generally estimated to be more causally effective and blameworthy than actors in “dress code”–related vignettes. In addition to the pronounced main effects of institutional domain as a factor influencing cause and blame judgments, we revealed few significant interaction effects of the latter with other experimental factors used for vignettes construction.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244020970942
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