Justification of effort by humans is a form of reducing cognitive dissonance by enhancing the value of rewards when they are more difficult to obtain. Presumably, assigning greater value to rewards provides justification for the greater effort needed to obtain them. We have found such effects in adult humans and children with a highly controlled laboratory task. More importantly, under various conditions we have found similar effects in pigeons, animals not typically thought to need to justify their behavior to themselves or others. To account for these results, we have proposed a mechanism based on within-trial contrast between the end of the effort and the reinforcement (or the signal for reinforcement) that follows. This model predicts t...
PMID: 19815925International audienceWhen pigeons are given a choice between an initial-link alternat...
To date there has been no convincing evidence for preference reversal in pigeons using concurrent-ch...
Contrast refers to a comparison between two conditions of reward such that the relation between them...
According to Festinger (1957), cognitive dissonance occurs when one’s behavior or belief is inconsis...
Research in animal and human models suggests that greater reward value is associated with tasks requ...
Cognitive dissonance in which the subjective value of a reward is altered to justify the difficulty ...
The effort justification phenomenon, in which greater value is given to rewards that require more ef...
To understand how effort, defined by number of responses required to obtain a reward, affects reward...
We report six unsuccessful attempts to replicate the ‘‘work ethic’ ’ phenomenon reported by Clement,...
PMID: 19607889International audienceThere is evidence that pigeons prefer conditioned reinforcers th...
Humans prefer (conditioned) rewards that follow greater effort (Aronson & Mills, 1959). This phenome...
PMID: 18567273International audienceJustification of effort is a form of cognitive dissonance in whi...
The reinforcement-omission effect (ROE), also known as frustration effect, refers to greater respons...
The present paper defines and examines past research in the area of cognitive dissonance and provide...
The Pavlovian autoshaping paradigm has often been used to assess the behavioral effects of reward om...
PMID: 19815925International audienceWhen pigeons are given a choice between an initial-link alternat...
To date there has been no convincing evidence for preference reversal in pigeons using concurrent-ch...
Contrast refers to a comparison between two conditions of reward such that the relation between them...
According to Festinger (1957), cognitive dissonance occurs when one’s behavior or belief is inconsis...
Research in animal and human models suggests that greater reward value is associated with tasks requ...
Cognitive dissonance in which the subjective value of a reward is altered to justify the difficulty ...
The effort justification phenomenon, in which greater value is given to rewards that require more ef...
To understand how effort, defined by number of responses required to obtain a reward, affects reward...
We report six unsuccessful attempts to replicate the ‘‘work ethic’ ’ phenomenon reported by Clement,...
PMID: 19607889International audienceThere is evidence that pigeons prefer conditioned reinforcers th...
Humans prefer (conditioned) rewards that follow greater effort (Aronson & Mills, 1959). This phenome...
PMID: 18567273International audienceJustification of effort is a form of cognitive dissonance in whi...
The reinforcement-omission effect (ROE), also known as frustration effect, refers to greater respons...
The present paper defines and examines past research in the area of cognitive dissonance and provide...
The Pavlovian autoshaping paradigm has often been used to assess the behavioral effects of reward om...
PMID: 19815925International audienceWhen pigeons are given a choice between an initial-link alternat...
To date there has been no convincing evidence for preference reversal in pigeons using concurrent-ch...
Contrast refers to a comparison between two conditions of reward such that the relation between them...