All Stories

  1. A preregistered test of competing theories to explain ego depletion effects using psychophysiological indicators of mental effort.
  2. p-Hacking and publication bias interact to distort meta-analytic effect size estimates.
  3. Explaining illness with evil: pathogen prevalence fosters moral vitalism
  4. The Past, Present, and Future of Ego Depletion
  5. Anger rumination partly accounts for the association between trait self-control and aggression
  6. Is Ego Depletion Real? An Analysis of Arguments
  7. The association between implicit alcohol attitudes and drinking behavior is moderated by baseline activation in the lateral prefrontal cortex.
  8. State mindfulness, self-regulation, and emotional experience in everyday life.
  9. Implicit theories about willpower predict the activation of a rest goal following self-control exertion.
  10. Reflective and impulsive processes explain (in)effectiveness of messages promoting physical activity: A randomized controlled trial.
  11. Self-perceived successful weight regulators are less affected by self-regulatory depletion in the domain of eating behavior
  12. Personal prayer counteracts self-control depletion
  13. The Routines of Decision Making
  14. Personal prayer buffers self-control depletion
  15. The moderating role of regulatory focus on the social modeling of food intake
  16. Suppressing Emotions Impairs Subsequent Stroop Performance and Reduces Prefrontal Brain Activation
  17. Emotion suppression reduces hippocampal activity during successful memory encoding
  18. Do Implicit Attitudes Predict Actual Voting Behavior Particularly for Undecided Voters?
  19. Mindfulness meditation counteracts self-control depletion
  20. Selective Exposure in Decided and Undecided Individuals
  21. Just a Little Bit Longer: Viewing Time of Erotic Material from a Self-Control Perspective
  22. On the Validity of Idiographic and Generic Self-Concept Implicit Association Tests: A Core-Concept Model
  23. Impulsive processes in the self-regulation of health behaviour: theoretical and methodological considerations in response to commentaries
  24. Zwei Seelen wohnen, ach, in meiner Brust
  25. On taming horses and strengthening riders: Recent developments in research on interventions to improve self-control in health behaviors
  26. Self-control training decreases aggression in response to provocation in aggressive individuals
  27. Understanding Impulsive Aggression: Angry Rumination and Reduced Self-Control Capacity Are Mechanisms Underlying the Provocation-Aggression Relationship
  28. Psychology of Self-Regulation
  29. Here’s Looking at You, Bud
  30. Regulatory focus and reliance on implicit preferences in consumption contexts
  31. Being on the Lookout for Validity
  32. Control me or I will control you: Impulses, trait self-control, and the guidance of behavior
  33. Whose Fault Is it Anyway? Political Orientation, Attributions of Responsibility, and Support for the War in Iraq
  34. Impulse and Self-Control From a Dual-Systems Perspective
  35. Three ways to resist temptation: The independent contributions of executive attention, inhibitory control, and affect regulation to the impulse control of eating behavior
  36. Men on the “Pull”
  37. Social Psychology of Consumer Behavior
  38. Reliability and validity of the Single-Target IAT (ST-IAT): assessing automatic affect towards multiple attitude objects
  39. What would you have as a last supper? Thoughts about death influence evaluation and consumption of food products
  40. When impulses take over: Moderated predictive validity of explicit and implicit attitude measures in predicting food choice and consumption behaviour
  41. Impulses got the better of me: Alcohol moderates the influence of implicit attitudes toward food cues on eating behavior.
  42. Working memory capacity and self-regulatory behavior: Toward an individual differences perspective on behavior determination by automatic versus controlled processes.
  43. Predicting Voting Behavior with Implicit Attitude Measures
  44. Do features of stimuli influence IAT effects?
  45. Implicit consumer preferences and their influence on product choice
  46. On the different uses of linguistic abstractness: from LIB to LEB and beyond