Results 191 to 200 of about 2,236 (223)
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Ego Depletion Increases Risk-Taking

The Journal of Social Psychology, 2012
We investigated how the availability of self-control resources affects risk-taking inclinations and behaviors. We proposed that risk-taking often occurs from suboptimal decision processes and heuristic information processing (e.g., when a smoker suppresses or neglects information about the health risks of smoking).
Peter, Fischer   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

The modality effect of ego depletion: Auditory task modality reduces ego depletion

Scandinavian Journal of Psychology, 2016
An initial act of self‐control that impairs subsequent acts of self‐control is called ego depletion. The ego depletion phenomenon has been observed consistently. The modality effect refers to the effect of the presentation modality on the processing of stimuli. The modality effect was also robustly found in a large body of research.
Qiong, Li, Zhenhong, Wang
openaire   +2 more sources

Anxiety, Ego Depletion, and Sports Performance

Journal of Sport and Exercise Psychology, 2012
In the present article, we analyzed the role of self-control strength and state anxiety in sports performance. We tested the hypothesis that self-control strength and state anxiety interact in predicting sports performance on the basis of two studies, each using a different sports task (Study 1: performance in a basketball free throw task, N = 64 ...
Englert, Chris, Bertrams, Alex
openaire   +3 more sources

Ego depletion improves insight

Thinking & Reasoning, 2017
Initial acts of self-control can reduce effort and performance on subsequent tasks – a phenomenon known as ego depletion. Ego depletion is thought to undermine the capacity or willingness to engage executive control, an important determinant of success for many tasks.
Marci S. DeCaro, Charles A. Van Stockum
openaire   +1 more source

Revisiting Ego Depletion: Moderators and Measurement

Basic and Applied Social Psychology, 2018
We developed and validated two web-based tasks to induce and measure ego depletion in two online experiments (N = 122 and N = 788).
Ranjit K. Singh, Anja S. Göritz
openaire   +3 more sources

Regret Causes Ego-Depletion and Finding Benefits in the Regrettable Events Alleviates Ego-Depletion

The Journal of General Psychology, 2014
This study tested the hypotheses that experiencing regret would result in ego-depletion, while finding benefits (i.e., "silver linings") in the regret-eliciting events counteracted the ego-depletion effect. Using a modified gambling paradigm (Experiments 1, 2, and 4) and a retrospective method (Experiments 3 and 5), five experiments were conducted to ...
Hongmei, Gao   +5 more
openaire   +2 more sources

When More Depletion Offsets the Ego Depletion Effect

Social Psychology, 2014
The ego depletion effect has been consistently replicated using the typical paradigm that consists of two consecutive tasks. However, striking contradiction exists in studies employing multiple tasks. The aim of the current study is to replicate previous studies following a similar procedure and design in a sample of participants from a non-western ...
Shanshan Xiao   +3 more
openaire   +1 more source

The Limits of Ego Depletion

Social Psychology, 2019
Abstract. Evidence on the existence of the ego depletion phenomena as well as the size of the effects and potential moderators and mediators are ambiguous. Building on a crossover design that enables superior statistical power within a single study, we investigated the robustness of the ego depletion effect between and within subjects and moderating ...
Mario Wenzel   +4 more
openaire   +1 more source

Coping and Ego Depletion

2015
This chapter discusses coping and ego depletion, and combines a new approach to the self with a traditional, standard idea about coping in order to understand the coping process. The central idea is that many operations of the self involve the consumption of a limited resource.
Roy F. Baumeister   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Moderators of the Ego Depletion Effect

2016
The present chapter reviews moderators of the ego depletion effect. We organize the plethora of moderators in a two-factor organizing grid in terms of (1) timing and (2) leverage point. The timing factor distinguishes moderators that are active before the start of the first demanding task in the typical dual-task paradigm versus those that are ...
Loschelder, David D., Friese, Malte
openaire   +2 more sources

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