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SPSP Annual Meeting 2010

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Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin
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Ease of Counterfactual Thought Generation Moderates the Relationship Between Need for Cognition and Punitive Responses to Crime

John V. Petrocelli

Wake Forest University, petrocjv{at}wfu.edu

Keith Dowd

Wake Forest University

Punitive responses to crime have been linked to a relatively low need for cognition (NFC). Sargent's (2004) findings suggest that this relationship is due to a relatively complex attributional system, employed by high-NFC individuals, which permits them to recognize potential external or situational causes of crime. However, high-NFC individuals may also be more likely to engage in counterfactual thinking, which has been linked to greater judgments of blame and responsibility. Three studies examine the relationship between trait and state NFC and punitiveness in light of counterfactual thinking. Results suggest that the ease of generating upward counterfactuals in response to an unfortunate crime moderates the NFC-punitiveness relationship, such that high-NFC individuals are less punitive than low-NFC individuals only when counterfactual thoughts are relatively difficult to generate. These findings are discussed in light of punishment theory and their possible implications with regard to the legal system.

Key Words: counterfactual thinking • need for cognition • punishment • attitudes

This version was published on September 1, 2009

Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, Vol. 35, No. 9, 1179-1192 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/0146167209337164


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