Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Attributions.
Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Attributions and, of course, Attributions synonyms and on the right images related to the word Attributions.
Attribution
Attribution At`tri*bu"tion, n. [L. attributio: cf. F.
attribution.]
1. The act of attributing or ascribing, as a quality,
character, or function, to a thing or person, an effect to
a cause.
2. That which is ascribed or attributed.
Meaning of Attributions from wikipedia
- Look up
attribution in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Attribution may
refer to:
Attribution (copyright),
concept in
copyright law
requiring an author...
- (internal).
These initial perceptions are
called attributions.
Psychologists use
these attributions to
better understand an individual's
motivation and...
-
process of
making attributions. As
early researchers explored the way
people make
causal attributions, they also
recognized that
attributions do not necessarily...
- In marketing,
attribution, also
known as multi-touch
attribution (MTA), is the
identification of a set of user
actions ("events" or "touchpoints") that...
- make
dispositional attributions. Choice,
having the
opportunity and
willingness to
choose one’s
behaviour can show
internal attributions.
Accidental vs....
-
Attribution, in
copyright law, is
acknowledgment as
credit to the
copyright holder or
author of a work. If a work is
under copyright,
there is a long...
-
naturalistic attributions.
Scholars in the
field of
cognitive science of
religion study religious thought and behavior, like
religious attribution, from the...
- "Not for
Attribution" is the
third episode of the
fifth season of the HBO
original series The Wire. The
episode was
written by
Chris Collins from a story...
- inference,
while causal attributions occur much more slowly. It has also been
suggested that
correspondence inferences and
causal attributions are
elicited by...
-
False attribution may
refer to:
Misattribution in general, when a
quotation or work is accidentally, traditionally, or
based on bad
information attributed...