Vohs Kathleen D, Baumeister Roy F, Schmeichel Brandon J, Twenge Jean M, Nelson Noelle M, Tice Dianne M
Marketing Department, Carlson School of Management, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA.
J Pers Soc Psychol. 2008 May;94(5):883-98. doi: 10.1037/0022-3514.94.5.883.
The current research tested the hypothesis that making many choices impairs subsequent self-control. Drawing from a limited-resource model of self-regulation and executive function, the authors hypothesized that decision making depletes the same resource used for self-control and active responding. In 4 laboratory studies, some participants made choices among consumer goods or college course options, whereas others thought about the same options without making choices. Making choices led to reduced self-control (i.e., less physical stamina, reduced persistence in the face of failure, more procrastination, and less quality and quantity of arithmetic calculations). A field study then found that reduced self-control was predicted by shoppers' self-reported degree of previous active decision making. Further studies suggested that choosing is more depleting than merely deliberating and forming preferences about options and more depleting than implementing choices made by someone else and that anticipating the choice task as enjoyable can reduce the depleting effect for the first choices but not for many choices.
做出过多选择会损害后续的自我控制能力。基于自我调节和执行功能的有限资源模型,作者们推测,决策会耗尽用于自我控制和积极反应的相同资源。在4项实验室研究中,一些参与者在消费品或大学课程选项中进行选择,而另一些参与者则思考相同的选项但不做选择。做出选择会导致自我控制能力下降(即体力下降、面对失败时坚持性降低、更多拖延行为,以及算术计算的质量和数量下降)。一项实地研究随后发现,购物者自我报告的先前积极决策程度可以预测自我控制能力的下降。进一步的研究表明,做出选择比仅仅思考并形成对选项的偏好更消耗精力,也比执行他人做出的选择更消耗精力,而且预期选择任务是令人愉快的可以减少首次选择时的消耗效应,但对多次选择则不然。