Authors
Mark Muraven, Dianne M Tice, Roy F Baumeister
Publication date
1998/3
Journal
Journal of personality and social psychology
Volume
74
Issue
3
Pages
774
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Description
If self-regulation conforms to an energy or strength model, then self-control should be impaired by prior exertion. In Study 1, trying to regulate one's emotional response to an upsetting movie was followed by a decrease in physical stamina. In Study 2, suppressing forbidden thoughts led to a subsequent tendency to give up quickly on unsolvable anagrams. In Study 3, suppressing thoughts impaired subsequent efforts to control the expression of amusement and enjoyment. In Study 4, autobiographical accounts of successful versus failed emotional control linked prior regulatory demands and fatigue to self-regulatory failure. A strength model of self-regulation fits the data better than activation, priming, skill, or constant capacity models of self-regulation.(PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)
Total citations
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Scholar articles
M Muraven, DM Tice, RF Baumeister - Journal of personality and social psychology, 1998