The authors propose that people use 2 routes in justifying self-gratification: 1st through hard work or excellence (entitlement) and the 2nd through the attainment of vices without depleting income. This framework was tested using real tasks and choices adopted from prior research on self-control. The results indicate that (a) higher effort and (bogus) excellence feedback increase preferences for vice rewards, but these effects are reversed or attenuated when the interchangeability of effort and income is implied; (b) willingness to pay in effort is greater for vices than virtues, but willingness to pay in income is higher for virtues; and (c) these effects are magnified among individuals with stronger (chronic or manipulated) guilt. The au...
To manage conflicts between temptation and commitment, people use self-control. The process model of...
Most crime prevention practices assume offenders will desist from crime if the opportunity to offend...
Some people argue that contingencies of self-worth are indispensable sources of motivation (Pyszczyn...
The decision to indulge is often painful because it evokes guilt and requires sacrificing prudence a...
Despite having good intentions, people often fail to exercise self-control to act in line with their...
peer reviewedSelf-control is typically conceptualized as an inherent human skill, focusing on the im...
Are people more satisfied with decisions to resist or to indulge temptation? We propose that the eff...
Are people more satisfied with decisions to resist or to indulge temptation? We propose that the eff...
The present research utilized experience sampling data to investigate how guilt and pride experience...
Self-administered rewards are ubiquitous. They serve as incentives for personal accomplishments and ...
Self-control is typically viewed as a key ingredient responsible for effective self-regulation and p...
Self-control is a highly adaptive human capacity. Accordingly, development of self-control is widely...
This study employed mixed methods to investigate whether individuals’ self-control varied across dom...
A study was designed to examine the influence of self-control depletion and positive mood induction ...
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: The "process-model" of self-control proposes that the ego-depletion effect is b...
To manage conflicts between temptation and commitment, people use self-control. The process model of...
Most crime prevention practices assume offenders will desist from crime if the opportunity to offend...
Some people argue that contingencies of self-worth are indispensable sources of motivation (Pyszczyn...
The decision to indulge is often painful because it evokes guilt and requires sacrificing prudence a...
Despite having good intentions, people often fail to exercise self-control to act in line with their...
peer reviewedSelf-control is typically conceptualized as an inherent human skill, focusing on the im...
Are people more satisfied with decisions to resist or to indulge temptation? We propose that the eff...
Are people more satisfied with decisions to resist or to indulge temptation? We propose that the eff...
The present research utilized experience sampling data to investigate how guilt and pride experience...
Self-administered rewards are ubiquitous. They serve as incentives for personal accomplishments and ...
Self-control is typically viewed as a key ingredient responsible for effective self-regulation and p...
Self-control is a highly adaptive human capacity. Accordingly, development of self-control is widely...
This study employed mixed methods to investigate whether individuals’ self-control varied across dom...
A study was designed to examine the influence of self-control depletion and positive mood induction ...
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: The "process-model" of self-control proposes that the ego-depletion effect is b...
To manage conflicts between temptation and commitment, people use self-control. The process model of...
Most crime prevention practices assume offenders will desist from crime if the opportunity to offend...
Some people argue that contingencies of self-worth are indispensable sources of motivation (Pyszczyn...