Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10440739 | Personality and Individual Differences | 2007 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
Two studies examined individual differences in indecision on performance speed, accuracy, and subsequent self-control. In Study 1, indecisives (n = 36) took longer yet maintained accuracy as decisives (n = 39) on a Stroop task anticipating feedback (no feedback, success, or failure). Indecisives in the no feedback condition depleted their self-regulatory resources while maintaining accuracy. In Study 2 the number of Stroop trials increased with no performance feedback. Indecisives (n = 25) compared to decisives (n = 25) maintained accuracy yet took significantly longer and experienced depleted self-control. Prior choice exertion by indecisives to regulate effectively performance accuracy depleted capacity for subsequent self-control, and indecisives seem aware of lowered self-regulation energy. A self-control strength model may be important in understanding indecision.
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Authors
Joseph R. Ferrari, Timothy A. Pychyl,