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Ego Depletion Reduces Attention Control: Evidence From Two High-Powered Preregistered Experiments
Author(s) -
Katie Garrison,
Anna J Finley,
Brandon J. Schmeichel
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
personality and social psychology bulletin
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.584
H-Index - 193
eISSN - 1552-7433
pISSN - 0146-1672
DOI - 10.1177/0146167218796473
Subject(s) - ego depletion , psychology , stroop effect , task (project management) , id, ego and super ego , attentional control , control (management) , self control , social psychology , cognitive psychology , test (biology) , developmental psychology , cognition , management , neuroscience , economics , paleontology , biology
Two preregistered experiments with more than 1,000 participants in total found evidence of an ego depletion effect on attention control. Participants who exercised self-control on a writing task went on to make more errors on Stroop tasks (Experiment 1) and the Attention Network Test (Experiment 2) compared with participants who did not exercise self-control on the initial writing task. The depletion effect on response times was nonsignificant. A mini meta-analysis of the two experiments found a small ( d = 0.20) but significant increase in error rates in the controlled writing condition, thereby providing evidence of poorer attention control under ego depletion. These results, which emerged from preregistered experiments in large samples of participants, represent some of the most rigorous evidence yet of the ego depletion effect.

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