Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
920099 | Acta Psychologica | 2012 | 7 Pages |
Successful goal-directed behavior requires self-regulation to override competing impulses. Emerging evidence suggests that attention may mediate such acts, but little is known about the specific operations through which attention might influence self-regulation. Here we test this often-implicit assumption by manipulating attention mechanisms in two ways: one controlling the inhibition of inappropriate responses; the other controlling the breadth of attention. Participants significantly improved their performance on a self-regulation task after practice on a response inhibition task (Experiment 1) and after the induction of a broad focus of attention in a visual discrimination task (Experiment 2). We propose that such manipulations enhance self-regulation by engaging mechanisms that enhance the salience of goal-related representations and reduce the activation of competing goal-irrelevant neural representations. By more efficiently resolving conflict among the signals vying to drive behavior, pre-engaging attention may also help to conserve resources needed for continued self-regulation.
► We examined the influence of attentional manipulation on self-regulation. ► Broadening the scope of attention improves self-regulation. ► Practicing response inhibition improves self-regulation. ► Efficient attentional processing frees up mental resources for self-regulation.