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      Repeated failure: A source of helplessness or a factor irrelevant to its emergence?

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      Journal of Experimental Psychology: General
      American Psychological Association (APA)

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          Abstract

          We tested the validity of the egotism model of human helplessness. In contrast to the original theoretical approach of Seligman and his associates, which points to response-outcome noncontingency as the main source of helplessness, the egotism alternative proposes that repeated failure itself is the critical determinant of helplessness symptoms. Repeated failure threatens the self-esteem of the subject, who supposedly engages in a least-effort strategy during the test phase of a typical learned helplessness study, which results in performance impairment. To examine the egotism explanation, we gave subjects noncontingent-feedback training with or without repeated failure on five consecutive discrimination problems. In two experiments, noncontingent-feedback preexposure produced helplessness deficits in performance on avoidance learning, whereas repeated failure appeared irrelevant to helplessness. This and our other findings from research are inconsistent with the egotism explanation and support instead Seligman's original proposal, in which helplessness is attributed to prolonged experience with noncontingency.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Journal of Experimental Psychology: General
          Journal of Experimental Psychology: General
          American Psychological Association (APA)
          1939-2222
          0096-3445
          1989
          1989
          : 118
          : 1
          : 3-12
          Article
          10.1037/0096-3445.118.1.3
          2522505
          d4dbd446-d6c5-4869-913b-1b0407aa1d5d
          © 1989
          History

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