Duckworth Angela, Steinberg Laurence
University of Pennsylvania.
Temple University.
Child Dev Perspect. 2015 Mar;9(1):32-37. doi: 10.1111/cdep.12107.
Self-controlled behavior refers to actions aligned with valued, longer-term goals in the face of conflicting impulses to seek immediate gratification. In this article, we argue that the psychological processes that contribute to self-controlled behavior can be grouped into two functionally distinct categories: Volitional processes facilitate self-controlled behavior and include executive functions as well as learned metacognitive strategies like planning, attention deployment, and psychological distancing. In contrast, impulsigenic processes undermine self-controlled behavior and include reward sensitivity, sensation seeking, and domain-specific cravings. A disproportionate amount of research has addressed the former at the expense of understanding individual and developmental differences in the latter. This imbalance is now being rectified. Distinguishing between self-controlled behavior and its antecedent psychological processes helps illuminate normative developmental changes in self-control and points to directions for measurement and intervention.
自我控制行为是指在面对寻求即时满足的冲突冲动时,与有价值的长期目标相一致的行为。在本文中,我们认为,有助于自我控制行为的心理过程可分为两个功能上不同的类别:意志过程促进自我控制行为,包括执行功能以及诸如计划、注意力分配和心理距离等习得的元认知策略。相比之下,冲动性过程会破坏自我控制行为,包括奖励敏感性、寻求刺激和特定领域的渴望。大量研究都聚焦于前者,却忽视了对后者个体差异和发展差异的理解。这种不平衡现在正在得到纠正。区分自我控制行为及其先前的心理过程有助于阐明自我控制的规范性发展变化,并为测量和干预指明方向。