1. Decoding the influence of emotional and attentional states on self-control using facial analysis
- Author
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Aydogan, Gökhan, Kretschmer, Janek, Brewer, Gene, and McClure, Samuel M
- Subjects
Biological Psychology ,Information and Computing Sciences ,Human-Centred Computing ,Psychology ,Mind and Body ,Clinical Research ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental Health ,Behavioral and Social Science ,1.2 Psychological and socioeconomic processes ,Mental health ,Humans ,Female ,Attention ,Male ,Emotions ,Self-Control ,Facial Expression ,Young Adult ,Adult ,Psychomotor Performance ,Adolescent ,Anagram task ,Fatigue ,Psychomotor vigilance task ,Self-control ,Ultimatum game - Abstract
Self-control plays a pivotal role in pursuing long-term goals related to health and financial well-being. While ample evidence suggests that humans are prone to occasional self-control lapses, little is known about how changes in emotional and attentional states affect the ability to maintain self-control. In two studies (N1 = 109 and N2 = 90), we used emotion recognition software to decode participants' facial expressions while manipulating their attentional and emotional states during a Psychomotor Vigilance Task (PVT) before exerting self-control in a subsequent task. Our findings reveal dissociable roles of attention and valence in maintaining self-control, depending on the distinct demands of the task. Specifically, performance in a subsequent cognitive task was predominantly associated with changes in attentional states during the PVT rather than valence. Conversely, preferences in a subsequent social task were associated with changes in valence states during the PVT, while attention showed no effect. This dissociation between attention-invoked and emotion-invoked lapses in self-control holds significant implications for psychological and economic models of self-control, ultimately contributing to the development of policies to mitigate the detrimental consequences of individual self-control lapses.
- Published
- 2024