Bernard Weiner is an American social psychologist known for developing a form of attribution theory which seeks to explain the emotional and motivational entailments of academic success and failure. His contributions include linking attribution theory, the psychology of motivation, and emotion.
Professor Weiner's primary research interests are Social Cognition, Helping, Prosocial Behaviour, Judgment and Decision Making, Motivation, Goal Setting, Causal Attribution, Law and Public Policy, Interpersonal Processes and Emotion, Mood, Affect. Weiner got interested in the field of attribution after studying achievement motivation. He used TAT to identify differences in people's achievement needs and then turned to the study of individual issues people face when they think of their own successes and failures. He further conducted research into the cognitive processes that have motivational influence.
Attribution theory seeks to explain the causes of an event or behavior. A three stages process, they are observations, determination of behavior, and attributing to causes. There are two types of attributions, namely external and internal. External attribution relates causality to outside agents, whereas, internal attribution assigns the person himself for any behavior. In an 1996 interview, Weiner elaborated how attribution contributes to "high ability, high achievement, and giftedness", stating that "other-perception and self-perception form a unity, together, which influence task persistence and, therefore, actual ability." According to Weiner, everyone all have similar psychodynamics in the classroom and students tend to seek explanation for personal failure. Weiner raised the question on what is considered "sin" and what is "sickness." The construals he gave surrounded obesity: obesity due to overeating is a sin; obesity because of a thyroid problem is a sickness. Bernard hoped that these type of scenarios would help him come up with a general theory of social conduct.
Publications and partial bibliography
Weiner, B.. An attributional theory of motivation and emotion. New York: Springer-Verlag.
Weiner, B.. Human Motivation: Metaphors, Theories, and Research. Sage Publications.
Weiner, B.. Theories of Motivation: From Mechanism to Cognition. Markham Publishing Company.
Weiner, B.. Social Motivation, Justice, And The Moral Emotions: An Attributional Approach. Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
Weiner, B.. Judgments of Responsibility: A Foundation for a Theory of Social Conduct. The Guilford Press.