Detailansicht

Gelernte Hilflosigkeit
der Einfluss von Geschlecht, Attributionsverhalten und Persönlichkeit
Anna Karla Paulitschek
Art der Arbeit
Diplomarbeit
Universität
Universität Wien
Fakultät
Fakultät für Psychologie
Betreuer*in
Birgit Derntl
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DOI
10.25365/thesis.13394
URN
urn:nbn:at:at-ubw:1-29518.15568.861753-8
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Abstracts

Abstract
(Deutsch)
Objective: The learned helplessness hypothesis states that individuals exposed to loss of control show cognitive, emotional and motivational deficits. Various variables such as gender and attributional style have been reported to influence the development of learned helplessness, albeit with inconsistent findings. Therefore the aim of this cross-sectional study was to examine the effects of gender, attributional style and personality on experimentally induced helplessness. Additionally, emotional and cognitive symptoms of helplessness were investigated. Method: The sample consisted of 30 male and 30 female University students aged 19 to 30 years (n = 60). Helplessness was induced by processing a computer-assisted anagram task consisting of solvable and unsolvable items. The degree of helplessness was assessed by a specific questionnaire. Prior to the helplessness task all participants completed a comprehensive psychological test battery including various intelligence (sub-) tests, the NEO-Five Factor Inventory (NEO-FFI), the German version of the Attributional Style Questionnaire (ASF-E), the Positive and Negative Affective Schedule (PANAS) and the Emotional Self Rating (ESR). Results and Conclusion: Data analysis revealed no significant gender differences concerning the development of helplessness. Male participants showing signficantly higher agreeableness were more susceptible to helplessness while females displaying lower agreeableness tended to become helpless. Other gender-specific interactions were found regarding the individual attributional behavior: A negative attributional style (negative stable, global and internal attributions for failure) was associated with increased helplessness in women. Those results are in line with previous helplessness studies considering the interaction of gender with personality and attributional variables. Anger and aggression were increased after induction. Those findings support the discrimination in helplessness or reactance as a reaction to loss of control.
Abstract
(Englisch)
Objective: The learned helplessness hypothesis states that individuals exposed to loss of control show cognitive, emotional and motivational deficits. Various variables such as gender and attributional style have been reported to influence the development of learned helplessness, albeit with inconsistent findings. Therefore the aim of this cross-sectional study was to examine the effects of gender, attributional style and personality on experimentally induced helplessness. Additionally, emotional and cognitive symptoms of helplessness were investigated. Method: The sample consisted of 30 male and 30 female University students aged 19 to 30 years (n = 60). Helplessness was induced by processing a computer-assisted anagram task consisting of solvable and unsolvable items. The degree of helplessness was assessed by a specific questionnaire. Prior to the helplessness task all participants completed a comprehensive psychological test battery including various intelligence (sub-) tests, the NEO-Five Factor Inventory (NEO-FFI), the German version of the Attributional Style Questionnaire (ASF-E), the Positive and Negative Affective Schedule (PANAS) and the Emotional Self Rating (ESR). Results and Conclusion: Data analysis revealed no significant gender differences concerning the development of helplessness. Male participants showing signficantly higher agreeableness were more susceptible to helplessness while females displaying lower agreeableness tended to become helpless. Other gender-specific interactions were found regarding the individual attributional behavior: A negative attributional style (negative stable, global and internal attributions for failure) was associated with increased helplessness in women. Those results are in line with previous helplessness studies considering the interaction of gender with personality and attributional variables. Anger and aggression were increased after induction. Those findings support the discrimination in helplessness or reactance as a reaction to loss of control.

Schlagwörter

Schlagwörter
(Deutsch)
gelernte Hilflosigkeit Geschlecht Attributionsverhalten Persönlichkeit Stimmung Leistung
Autor*innen
Anna Karla Paulitschek
Haupttitel (Deutsch)
Gelernte Hilflosigkeit
Hauptuntertitel (Deutsch)
der Einfluss von Geschlecht, Attributionsverhalten und Persönlichkeit
Publikationsjahr
2011
Umfangsangabe
139 S. : graph. Darst.
Sprache
Deutsch
Beurteiler*in
Nina Pintzinger
Klassifikation
77 Psychologie > 77.70 Klinische Psychologie
AC Nummer
AC08470785
Utheses ID
12040
Studienkennzahl
UA | 298 | | |
Universität Wien, Universitätsbibliothek, 1010 Wien, Universitätsring 1