Objectives: Prior self-control exertion has been shown to have a detrimental effect on subsequent physical performance. However, some potential underpinning mechanisms of the effect have yet to be examined. The present study explored whether exerting self-control reduces subsequent physical performance; and also examines the role of boredom, motivation, perceptions of pain, and sustained attention as mechanisms to explain these performance effects. Methods: In a within-subjects order-balanced crossover design, 63 participants completed a self-control exertion task (incongruent Stroop) and non-self-control exertion task (congruent Stroop) for 4 min. Immediately after, participants completed a wall-sit task until volitional exhaustion. Ta...
It has been proposed that one reason physical effort is perceived as costly is because of the self-c...
International audienceThe ego-depletion effect refers to a temporary failure of self-control exertio...
Background and aims: Suspending an ongoing activity with the intention to resume it again later is a...
Objectives: Prior self-control exertion has been shown to have a detrimental effect on subsequent p...
Objectives: Exertion of self-control has been associated with impaired performance on subsequent ph...
Prior self-control exertion is consistently reported to cause decrements in subsequent physical perf...
Self-control does not always work effectively. Whether this reflects the depletion of a global self-...
Prior research implicates ego-depletion in directed-attention failure, but provides few explanations...
Research on the effectiveness of distraction as a method of pain control is inconclusive. One mechan...
Research on the effectiveness of distraction as a method of pain control is inconclusive. One mechan...
Research in the field of sport and exercise psychology has repeatedly highlighted the importance of ...
Introduction: Pain typically impairs task performance, increases fatigue, and is associated with beh...
Research on the effectiveness of distraction as a method of pain control is inconclusive. One mechan...
BACKGROUND: The present study tested the hypothesis that the affective and motivational context infl...
It has been proposed that one reason physical effort is perceived as costly is because of the self-c...
International audienceThe ego-depletion effect refers to a temporary failure of self-control exertio...
Background and aims: Suspending an ongoing activity with the intention to resume it again later is a...
Objectives: Prior self-control exertion has been shown to have a detrimental effect on subsequent p...
Objectives: Exertion of self-control has been associated with impaired performance on subsequent ph...
Prior self-control exertion is consistently reported to cause decrements in subsequent physical perf...
Self-control does not always work effectively. Whether this reflects the depletion of a global self-...
Prior research implicates ego-depletion in directed-attention failure, but provides few explanations...
Research on the effectiveness of distraction as a method of pain control is inconclusive. One mechan...
Research on the effectiveness of distraction as a method of pain control is inconclusive. One mechan...
Research in the field of sport and exercise psychology has repeatedly highlighted the importance of ...
Introduction: Pain typically impairs task performance, increases fatigue, and is associated with beh...
Research on the effectiveness of distraction as a method of pain control is inconclusive. One mechan...
BACKGROUND: The present study tested the hypothesis that the affective and motivational context infl...
It has been proposed that one reason physical effort is perceived as costly is because of the self-c...
International audienceThe ego-depletion effect refers to a temporary failure of self-control exertio...
Background and aims: Suspending an ongoing activity with the intention to resume it again later is a...