Question

Philip E. Tetlock authored a “social check” on this phenomenon, which was eliminated in an experiment centering on affirmative action. Thomas Pettigrew extended this phenomenon to an “ultimate” type for in- and out-groups. In an experiment demonstrating this phenomenon, students rated a quizmaster’s knowledge as “above average” despite being selected randomly. (-5[1])Lee Ross coined this phenomenon’s (10[1])name in an essay discussing how people believed individuals assigned (-5[1])to write pro-Castro essays were actually pro-Castro. (10[1])This (10[1])cognitive bias under-emphasizes situational explanations and overemphasizes trait-based explanations for an actor’s behavior. For 10 points, identify this “error” named in part for (-5[1])the process in which people infer causes for behaviors. ■END■ (10[2])

ANSWER: fundamental attribution error [or FAE; accept correspondence bias; prompt on attribution]
<Georgia Tech B, Social Science>
= Average correct buzz position

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Buzzes

PlayerTeamOpponentBuzz PositionValue
Alex AkridgeIndiana AChicago A50-5
Michael HundingIllinois AIllinois B5510
Liam StarnesChicago BWashU B65-5
Trenton BurgessIndiana BMissoui S&T7210
Charles HangWashU AMissouri7310
Sriram KoritalaIllinois CChicago D96-5
Ned TagtmeierChicago AIndiana A10610
Neal JoshiWashU BChicago B10610

Summary

Lower Mid-Atlantic2025-02-01Y650%0%33%86.33
Midwest2025-02-01Y683%0%50%82.40
Northeast2025-02-01Y450%0%75%99.50
Overflow2025-02-01Y450%0%50%52.00
Pacific Northwest2025-02-01Y250%0%100%72.00
UK2025-02-01Y1060%0%20%83.00
Upper Mid-Atlantic2025-02-01Y863%0%50%89.20