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This division, first proposed by Janoff-Bulman, [1] defines behavioral self-blame (BSB) as causal attribution of an event's occurrence to specific, controllable actions that the individual took. Characterological self-blame (CSB), on the other hand, is attribution of blame to factors of the self that are uncontrollable and stable over time (e.g.
Theories of self-blame in behavioral medicine suggest that self-blame has maladaptive and adaptive qualities. Self-blame can be adaptive when individuals recognize their past actions caused their negative consequences, and they also recognize that their behavior is modifiable.
Background: Feeling out of control during a traumatic event may evoke behavioral self-blame (BSB) to avoid feeling helpless following trauma by restoring one’s sense of control. BSB is a common, persistent, and treatment-resistant post-traumatic stress symptom.
1 wrz 2003 · The present study investigated the distinct affective experiences of shame and guilt and their relationship to self-blame (characterological vs. behavioral), blame of others, self-derogation, and fear of intimacy.
the self-blame literature shows that sometimes agents assign blame using other, less "reasonable" criteria, such as judgements of character and desert. Two types of self-blame exist, behavioral and character-ological self-blame (Janoff-Bulman, 1979). Whereas behavioral self-blame involves attributions that fault
5 sie 2023 · Background: Feeling out of control during a traumatic event may evoke behavioral self-blame (BSB) to avoid feeling helpless following trauma by restoring one’s sense of control. BSB is a common,...
In contrast, adolescents who engage in behavioral self-blame recognize that certain aspects of their behavior might invite victimization, but presumably they also recognize that that behavior is changeable. More specific aspects of self-worth are also affected by experience of bullying by peers.