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Chris Stiff

Researcher at Keele University

Publications -  15
Citations -  2455

Chris Stiff is an academic researcher from Keele University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Trait & Prejudice (legal term). The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 15 publications receiving 2198 citations. Previous affiliations of Chris Stiff include University of Nottingham & University of Bristol.

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Ego depletion and the strength model of self-control: a meta-analysis.

TL;DR: Support for motivation and fatigue as alternative explanations for ego depletion indicate a need to integrate the strength model with other theories and provide preliminary support for the ego-depletion effect and strength model hypotheses.
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The strength model of self-regulation failure and health-related behaviour

TL;DR: It is recommended practitioners adopt strategies to minimise self-regulatory failure in people engaging in health-related behaviours such as minimising demands on self-control resources in the early stages of uptake and eating regularly to prevent hypoglycaemia.
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Self-regulation and self-control in exercise: the strength-energy model

TL;DR: In this article, a strength-energy model of self-control is presented as an explanation for self-regulation in exercise contexts, which is an important component of psychosocial theories of exercise behavior and is associated with low adherence to health-related exercise.
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Interfering With Inferential, But Not Associative, Processes Underlying Spontaneous Trait Inference

TL;DR: The results show that inferences, and not merely associations, spontaneously form when processing information about self-informants, and the inferences and judgments that occur in spontaneous trait transference are not caused by the misidentification of third-party informants as self- informants.
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Limiting the spread of spontaneous trait transference

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed that the formation of such informant-trait associations would be disrupted by the presence of the target of the description, which would capture attention, lowering the likelihood of an informanttrait linkage being formed at behavioral encoding.