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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
In two different studies we examined the focus effect of a scenario (i.e., the fact that a given character
is the protagonist of a story) on two interconnected domains: the generation of counterfactual thoughts
and the ascription of blame. It was hypothesised that being the focal agent of a story would not only
lead to more counterfactuals centred on him or her, but also to greater ascriptions of blame as it would
be easier to imagine how that actor could have behaved differently had he chosen or wanted to, and
thus avoided a deleterious outcome. Different negatively-valenced scenarios depicting a certain
misfortune such as a mugging were created in which victim, perpetrator or both characters, were the
centre of the story. Results showed that placing either victim or perpetrator as the protagonist of a
scenario increases the number of counterfactual thoughts centred on that character, but does not
necessarily increase the blame attributed to him or her as the perpetrator was always ascribed more
blame than the victim, irrespective of who was the protagonist. Study 2’s findings replicate those of
Study 1 even with a different experimental design, modified materials, and various counterbalancing
measures, hence suggesting that being the protagonist enables one to easily consider counterfactual
alternatives involving that actor, but does not prevent one from identifying who is rightfully to blame
for a given misfortune. The results and their implications were interpreted according to different
theoretical perspectives and possible future avenues of research are discussed.
Description
Keywords
Counterfactual thinking Focus Mutability Blame
Citation
Análise Psicológica, 32, 355-385
Publisher
Instituto Superior de Psicologia Aplicada