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Implicit theories about willpower in resisting temptations and emotion control

Bernecker, Katharina; Job, Veronika (2017). Implicit theories about willpower in resisting temptations and emotion control. Zeitschrift für Psychologie, 225 (2), pp. 157-166. 10.1027/2151-2604/a000292

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Previous research suggests that people’s implicit theories about willpower affect continuous self-control performance in the domain of strenuous mental activities. The present research expands these findings to two further domains of self-control: resisting temptations and emotion control. In Study 1, participants were either led to resist a temptation or not. Participants who believed that willpower gets depleted by resistance to temptations (limited-resource theory) performed significantly worse in a subsequent Stroop task compared to participants who believed that resisting temptations activates their willpower (nonlimited-resource theory). In Study 2, participants controlled their emotions during a funny video or were allowed to express them. Participants who believed that controlling emotions depletes willpower performed worse in a subsequent persistence task than those who believed that controlling emotions activates willpower. Results suggest that implicit theories about willpower are domain specific and sensitive to the domain of the initial self-control task rather than that of the subsequent self-control task.

Item Type:

Journal Article (Original Article)

PHBern Contributor:

Bernecker, Katharina

ISSN:

2190-8370

Language:

English

Submitter:

Sibylle Blanchard

Date Deposited:

10 Jun 2024 16:27

Last Modified:

16 Jun 2024 00:11

Publisher DOI:

10.1027/2151-2604/a000292

URI:

https://phrepo.phbern.ch/id/eprint/7438

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