Situational Strategies for Self-Control
University of Pennsylvania · Yale University · +1 more institution
Abstract
Exercising self-control is often difficult, whether declining a drink in order to drive home safely, passing on the chocolate cake to stay on a diet, or ignoring text messages to finish reading an important paper. But enacting self-control is not always difficult, particularly when it takes the form of proactively choosing or changing situations in ways that weaken undesirable impulses or potentiate desirable ones. Examples of situational self-control include the partygoer who chooses a seat far from where drinks are being poured, the dieter who asks the waiter not to bring around the dessert cart, and the student who goes to the library without a cell phone. Using the process model of self-control, we argue…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 33.76
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 176
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Self-control
- Situational ethics
- Psychology
- Control (management)
- Cognitive psychology
- Social psychology
- Computer science
- Artificial intelligence