Department of Social and Decision Sciences, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, 15213, USA.
Department of Social and Decision Sciences, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, 15213, USA.
Curr Opin Psychol. 2024 Dec;60:101924. doi: 10.1016/j.copsyc.2024.101924. Epub 2024 Oct 10.
This paper explores self-control beyond the framework of time discounting, as is conventional in economics and decision research. Contrary to the notion that self-control failures stem from hyperbolic time discounting or present bias, we argue that self-control problems represent conflicts between the motivational thrusts of affects - i.e., emotions, physiological states, and cognitive motivational feeling states - and deliberations about the best course of behavior. Drawing upon theoretical foundations and empirical evidence, we highlight how affective states can both undermine and necessitate self-control. We critique the temporal discounting model for its inability to account for diverse self-control scenarios and propose that effective self-regulation often involves strategies to avoid or manage affective triggers, thus providing a more comprehensive understanding of self-control mechanisms.
本文探讨了自我控制,超越了经济学和决策研究中常见的时间贴现框架。与自我控制失败源于双曲线时间贴现或当前偏见的观点相反,我们认为自我控制问题代表了情感的动机推力(即情绪、生理状态和认知动机感觉状态)与对最佳行为方式的思考之间的冲突。本文借鉴理论基础和实证证据,强调了情感状态如何既能破坏又能需要自我控制。我们批评了时间贴现模型无法解释各种自我控制情况,并提出有效的自我调节通常涉及避免或管理情感触发的策略,从而更全面地理解自我控制机制。