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From thought to action: On the relevance of including situational cues in thought about intended actions.


ABSTRACT: Successful everyday self-regulation often hinges on implementing intended responses at a later time-often in specific situations. We address this self-regulation challenge by examining the role of individuals' thought about intended actions-and specifically whether it does or does not include situational cues. We hypothesized that including situational cues when thinking about intended actions enables stimulus-response learning, thereby increasing the likelihood of implementing the intended actions. Consequently, we pre-registered and found (N = 392, age range 18-94) a positive relationship between the self-reported habitual inclusion of situational cues in thought about intended actions and everyday self-regulation success (assessed by self-reported self-efficacy and self-control beliefs). In addition, we provide exploratory evidence that the inclusion of situational cues in thought about intended actions mediates the relationship between conscientiousness and self-regulation success. We discuss the results and the theoretical perspective in relation to how self-control outcomes can be explained by associative learning.

SUBMITTER: Martiny-Huenger T 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC8865665 | biostudies-literature | 2022

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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From thought to action: On the relevance of including situational cues in thought about intended actions.

Martiny-Huenger Torsten T   Damanskyy Yevhen Y   Parks-Stamm Elizabeth J EJ  

PloS one 20220223 2


Successful everyday self-regulation often hinges on implementing intended responses at a later time-often in specific situations. We address this self-regulation challenge by examining the role of individuals' thought about intended actions-and specifically whether it does or does not include situational cues. We hypothesized that including situational cues when thinking about intended actions enables stimulus-response learning, thereby increasing the likelihood of implementing the intended acti  ...[more]

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