reviewJournal of Applied PsychologyJan 1, 2003Closed access

Negative self-efficacy and goal effects revisited.

Stanford University · Stanford Medicine

PubMed
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Abstract

The authors address the verification of the functional properties of self-efficacy beliefs and document how self-efficacy beliefs operate in concert with goal systems within a sociocognitive theory of self-regulation in contrast to the focus of control theory on discrepancy reduction. Social cognitive theory posits proactive discrepancy production by adoption of goal challenges working in concert with reactive discrepancy reduction in realizing them. Converging evidence from diverse methodological and analytic strategies verifies that perceived self-efficacy and personal goals enhance motivation and performance attainments. The large body of evidence, as evaluated by 9 meta-analyses for the effect sizes of…

Citation impact

2,743
total citations
FWCI
51.22
Percentile
100%
References
109
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Psychology
  • Social cognitive theory
  • Self-efficacy
  • Goal setting
  • Social cognition
  • Social psychology
  • Goal orientation
  • Cognition
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Reduced inequalities
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