Gellatly I R, Meyer J P
University of Western Ontario, London, Canada.
J Appl Psychol. 1992 Oct;77(5):694-704. doi: 10.1037/0021-9010.77.5.694.
Two laboratory experiments with 117 undergraduate students were conducted to examine (a) the effect of assigned goal difficulty on arousal (self-report and heart rate), cognition (perceived norm, self-efficacy strength, and personal goal), and behavioral (task performance) measures and (b) the role of heart rate as a mediator of the goal-difficulty-performance relation. All Ss performed a task requiring cognitive and physical responses. Results of both experiments demonstrated that assigned goal difficulty affected heart rate, cognition, and task performance and that heart-rate change was positively related to the cognitive and behavioral measures. Regression analyses suggested that a cognitive-affective mechanism may mediate the goal-difficulty-performance relation. Discussion is focused on the theoretical and practical implications of integrating an arousal concept within goal-setting theory.
我们对117名本科生进行了两项实验室实验,以检验:(a)设定的目标难度对唤醒(自我报告和心率)、认知(感知规范、自我效能感强度和个人目标)以及行为(任务表现)指标的影响;(b)心率在目标难度与表现关系中作为中介变量的作用。所有被试都执行了一项需要认知和身体反应的任务。两项实验的结果均表明,设定的目标难度会影响心率、认知和任务表现,且心率变化与认知和行为指标呈正相关。回归分析表明,一种认知 - 情感机制可能介导了目标难度与表现的关系。讨论集中在将唤醒概念整合到目标设定理论中的理论和实践意义上。