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Group Processes & Intergroup Relations, Vol. 9, No. 2, 199-218 (2006)
DOI: 10.1177/1368430206062077
© 2006 SAGE Publications

Reactions to Positive Deviance: Social Identity and Attribution Dimensions

Kelly S. Fielding

Michael A. Hogg

Nicole Annandale

The University of Queensland

This research examines whether evaluations of positive deviates (i.e. high achieving group members) are influenced by the attributions they make for their performance. We argue that ingroup positive deviates who make group attributions help enhance the ingroup's image and thus attract favorable evaluations. In Experiment 1, ingroup positive deviates who made group attributions were generally evaluated more favorably than ingroup positive deviates who made individual attributions. There was also evidence that the positive deviates' attribution style influenced group and self-evaluations. Evaluations of outgroup positive deviates were not influenced by their attribution style. In Experiment 2, an ingroup positive deviate who was successful and attributed that success to the group was upgraded relative to an ingroup positive deviate who made individual attributions. Group evaluations were also higher when the positive deviate made group attributions. This pattern did not emerge when the positive deviate failed. The results are discussed from a social identity perspective.

Key Words: attribution • positive deviance • social identity


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