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Turn It All You Want: Still No Effect of Sugar Consumption on Ego Depletion
Author(s) -
Florian Lange,
Caroline Seer,
Mariça Rapior,
J.W.P Rose,
Frank Eggert
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of european psychology students
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2222-6931
DOI - 10.5334/jeps.cc
Subject(s) - ego depletion , generalizability theory , replication (statistics) , id, ego and super ego , sugar , task (project management) , psychology , consumption (sociology) , sugar consumption , social psychology , self control , developmental psychology , food science , biology , mathematics , economics , statistics , sociology , social science , management
After having completed an initial self-control task, individuals typically show less self-controlled behavior on a consecutive task. In addition, this so-called ego-depletion effect is assumed to be alleviated by the consumption of sugar-containing drinks. However, a recent replication study indicates that this effect has been substantially overestimated. In contrast to mainstream ego-depletion research, initial and consecutive self-control tasks were identical in that study. Here we evaluate the generalizability of these results by testing 70 participants on a dual-task paradigm involving dissimilar tasks. Between self-control tasks, participants consumed a drink containing either sugar or an artificial sweetener. Results suggest that sugar consumption does not counteract ego depletion even when dissimilar self-control tasks are used

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