Social Perception & Attribution

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Across
  1. 6. When you explain a missed cue as careless, or as bad monitors hiding the count-in.
  2. 7. When your first impression of someone becomes the filter for every later interaction with them.
  3. 9. Information from comparing one person’s behavior to how most people act in the same situation.
  4. 10. Explaining the cause by looking for a pattern across time and situations: “Who else? Only here? Every time?”
Down
  1. 1. Information about whether the behavior happens again under the same conditions.
  2. 2. Blaming the singer’s skill when the real problem is that they cannot hear themselves in the monitors.
  3. 3. When you attribute your good guitar-playing to skill, but blame the guitar’s action when you mess up.
  4. 4. Information about whether or not a behavior happens only in one specific context.
  5. 5. A singer forgets lyrics once, and you assume that they don’t care about the band.
  6. 8. When you label the vocalist “controlling,” and you interpret everything through that lens.