A currently popular model of self-control posits that the exertion of self-control relies on a resource, which is expended by acts of self-control, resulting in less of this resource being available for subsequent acts of self-control. Recently, glucose has been proposed as the resource in question. For this model to be correct, it must be the case that A) performing a self-control task reduces glucose levels relative to a control task and B) performing a self-control task reduces glucose relative to pre-task levels. Evidence from neurophysiology suggests that (A) is unlikely to be true, and the evidence surrounding (B) is mixed, and is unlikely to be true for subjects who have not recently fasted. From the standpoint of evolved function, g...
The central executive is theorized to be an overarching cognitive system responsible for coordinatin...
It has been argued that cognitive abilities that developed last ontogenetically are likely the first...
Glucose metabolism has been suggested as an underlying biological factor of self-control stimulating...
The strength model suggests that self-control relies on a limited resource. One candidate for this r...
The strength model suggests that self-control relies on a limited resource. One candidate for this r...
The strength model suggests that self-control relies on a limited resource. One candidate for this r...
The brain’s reliance on glucose as a primary fuel source is well established, but psychological mode...
The current study examined whether changes in glucose during a self-control task would predict chang...
The role of glucose in self-control has been under heated debate. Recent studies have suggested that...
Research evidence is suggestive of a strength model of self-control, also known as ego depletion, in...
The present work suggests that self-control relies on glucose as a limited energy source. Laboratory...
The glucose view of self-control posited glucose as the physiological substrate of self-control “res...
The glucose view of self-control posited glucose as the physiological substrate of self-control “res...
Research shows that self-control is resource limited and there is a gradual weakening in consecutive...
The central executive is theorized to be an overarching cognitive system responsible for coordinatin...
The central executive is theorized to be an overarching cognitive system responsible for coordinatin...
It has been argued that cognitive abilities that developed last ontogenetically are likely the first...
Glucose metabolism has been suggested as an underlying biological factor of self-control stimulating...
The strength model suggests that self-control relies on a limited resource. One candidate for this r...
The strength model suggests that self-control relies on a limited resource. One candidate for this r...
The strength model suggests that self-control relies on a limited resource. One candidate for this r...
The brain’s reliance on glucose as a primary fuel source is well established, but psychological mode...
The current study examined whether changes in glucose during a self-control task would predict chang...
The role of glucose in self-control has been under heated debate. Recent studies have suggested that...
Research evidence is suggestive of a strength model of self-control, also known as ego depletion, in...
The present work suggests that self-control relies on glucose as a limited energy source. Laboratory...
The glucose view of self-control posited glucose as the physiological substrate of self-control “res...
The glucose view of self-control posited glucose as the physiological substrate of self-control “res...
Research shows that self-control is resource limited and there is a gradual weakening in consecutive...
The central executive is theorized to be an overarching cognitive system responsible for coordinatin...
The central executive is theorized to be an overarching cognitive system responsible for coordinatin...
It has been argued that cognitive abilities that developed last ontogenetically are likely the first...
Glucose metabolism has been suggested as an underlying biological factor of self-control stimulating...