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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Prior self-control exertion and perceptions of pain during a physically demanding task

TLDR
In this paper, the authors explored whether prior self-control exertion reduces subsequent persistence on a physically demanding task, and whether any observed performance decrements could be explained by changes in perceptions of pain.
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This article is published in Psychology of Sport and Exercise.The article was published on 2017-11-01 and is currently open access. It has received 32 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Stroop effect & Pain tolerance.

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Citations
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Losing control

TL;DR: This column looks back at the days when the authors had direct, tactile control of their appliances and wonders what impact the loss of this control is having on their children's interest in engineering.
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Effects of Prior Cognitive Exertion on Physical Performance: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that cognitive exertion has a negative effect on subsequent physical performance that is not due to chance and suggest that previous meta-analysis results may have underestimated the overall effect.
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The effect of ego depletion or mental fatigue on subsequent physical endurance performance : A meta-analysis

TL;DR: This article performed a meta-analysis to quantify the effect of ego depletion and mental fatigue on subsequent physical endurance performance (42 independent effect sizes) and found that ego depletion or mental fatigue leads to a reduction in subsequent performance, and that the observed reduction in performance is higher when the person-situation fit is low.
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Integrating theories of self-control and motivation to advance endurance performance

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe and evaluate various theoretical perspectives on self-control, including limited resources, shifting priorities, and opportunity costs, and propose that attentional, rather than limited resource, explanations have more value for athletic performance.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Restoring the self: Positive affect helps improve self-regulation following ego depletion

TL;DR: The authors found that positive mood or emotion can counteract ego depletion after an initial act of self-regulation, participants who watched a comedy video or received a surprise gift self-regulated on various tasks as well as non-depleted participants and significantly better than participants who experienced a sad mood induction, a neutral mood stimulus, or a brief rest period.
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A Multilab Preregistered Replication of the Ego-Depletion Effect

TL;DR: The size of the ego-depletion effect was small with 95% confidence intervals (CIs) that encompassed zero (d = 0.04, 95% CI [−0.07, 0.15]), and implications of the findings for the psyche depletion effect and the resource depletion model of self-control are discussed.
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Why self-control seems (but may not be) limited.

TL;DR: A competing model that develops a non-resource-based account of self-control is advanced, suggesting that apparent regulatory failures reflect the motivated switching of task priorities as people strive to strike an optimal balance between engaging cognitive labor to pursue 'have- to' goals versus preferring cognitive leisure in the pursuit of 'want-to' goals.
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Two-Condition Within-Participant Statistical Mediation Analysis: A Path-Analytic Framework.

TL;DR: This article recast Judd et al.'s approach in the path-analytic framework that is now commonly used in between-participant mediation analysis, and extends the method to models with multiple mediators operating in parallel and serially and discusses the comparison of indirect effects in these more complex models.
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The daily inventory of stressful events: an interview-based approach for measuring daily stressors.

TL;DR: Regression analyses showed that specific types of daily stressors such as interpersonal tensions and network stressors were unique predictors of both health symptoms and mood.
Related Papers (5)
Frequently Asked Questions (1)
Q1. What are the contributions in this paper?

This 29 study, therefore, explored whether a ) prior self-control exertion reduces subsequent 30 persistence on a physically demanding task, and b ) whether any observed performance 31 decrements could be explained by changes in perceptions of pain.