articlePersonality and Social Psychology ReviewJun 17, 2011Closed access

On Conceptualizing Self-Control as More Than the Effortful Inhibition of Impulses

The Ohio State University

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

The notion that self-control entails effortful inhibition of impulses dominates prevailing psychological models of self-control. This article describes some of the conceptual and empirical limitations of defining self-control as the effortful inhibition of impulses. The present article instead advocates for a dual-motive conceptualization, which describes self-control as the process of advancing distal rather than proximal motivations when the two compete. Effortful impulse inhibition in this model represents only one of many means by which people promote their self-control efforts. Adopting a dual-motive approach offers new insight and proposes several new research directions. This article discusses these…

Citation impact

730
total citations
FWCI
13.84
Percentile
100%
References
158
Citations per year

Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Conceptualization
  • Self-control
  • Control (management)
  • Psychology
  • Impulse (physics)
  • Social psychology
  • Dual (grammatical number)
  • Ego depletion
No related works found for this paper.