Results 201 to 210 of about 2,236 (223)
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Ego depletion by response exaggeration
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 2006Suppressing or inhibiting responses has a host of negative effects, including a temporary reduction in self-regulatory strength (ego depletion). Less attention has been given to response exaggeration, which should also deplete regulatory strength and therefore disrupt subsequent self-control.
Brandon J. Schmeichel +3 more
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Self-regulation, ego depletion, and inhibition
Neuropsychologia, 2014Inhibition is a major form of self-regulation. As such, it depends on self-awareness and comparing oneself to standards and is also susceptible to fluctuations in willpower resources. Ego depletion is the state of reduced willpower caused by prior exertion of self-control.
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Action orientation overcomes the ego depletion effect
Scandinavian Journal of Psychology, 2014It has been consistently demonstrated that initial exertion of self‐control had negative influence on people's performance on subsequent self‐control tasks. This phenomenon is referred to as the ego depletion effect. Based on action control theory, the current research investigated whether the ego depletion effect could be moderated by individuals ...
Junhua, Dang +3 more
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If ego depletion cannot be studied using identical tasks, it is not ego depletion
Appetite, 2015The hypothesis that human self-control capacities are fueled by glucose has been challenged on multiple grounds. A recent study by Lange and Eggert adds to this criticism by presenting two powerful but unsuccessful attempts to replicate the effect of sugar drinks on ego depletion.
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Ego-Depletion – Verlust an Kontrolle
2010Im folgenden werden die zentralen Aussagen der Ego-Depletion-Theorie zusammenfassend dargestellt. Entwickelt wurde die Ego-Depletion-Theorie durch die Arbeiten von Baumeister, Bratslavsky, Muraven und Tice (1988), Baumeister, Muraven und Tice (2000) sowie Muraven und Baumeister (2000), die diese Theorie gleich einer Reihe empirischer Uberprufungen ...
Gerhard Raab +2 more
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Is Ego Depletion Real? An Analysis of Arguments
Personality and Social Psychology Review, 2018An influential line of research suggests that initial bouts of self-control increase the susceptibility to self-control failure (ego depletion effect). Despite seemingly abundant evidence, some researchers have suggested that evidence for ego depletion was the sole result of publication bias and p-hacking, with the true effect being indistinguishable ...
Malte Friese +4 more
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Implicit Positive Emotion Counteracts Ego Depletion
Social Behavior and Personality: an international journal, 2010Previous researchers have shown that individual acts of self-regulation deplete individual psychological resources, resulting in poor subsequent self-regulation and ego depletion. It has also been shown that to counteract ego depletion, besides getting enough sleep or rest, positive emotions are important.
Jun Ren +3 more
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Moral identity and ego-depletion
2019In the study, we found that after combating temptations to cheat, individuals with low moral identity performed worse on a subsequent cognitive task than those with high moral identity. It has significant implications for the strength model of self-regulation, and it informs us the insidious impact moral identity could have on basic cognitive ...
Liu, Kun, Zhang, Hong
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Ego Depletion Is Not Just Fatigue
Social Psychological and Personality Science, 2010Is the self-regulation failure that comes from prior exertions of self-regulation—the ego-depletion effect—the result of fatigue? A reading of the literature suggests that self-regulatory resource depletion and fatigue might be overlapping constructs, but direct empirical evidence is lacking.
Kathleen D. Vohs +3 more
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Ego Depletion: Theory and Evidence
2012AbstractSelf-control all too often fails. Despite people's best intentions and considerable negative outcomes, people often find themselves at the losing end of resisting temptation, combating urges, and changing their behavior. One reason for these failures may be that exerting self-control depletes a limited resource (ego depletion) that is necessary
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