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Summary Self-Regulation (C8894): Essential Reading, Week 5 (21/22) $8.08   Add to cart

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Summary Self-Regulation (C8894): Essential Reading, Week 5 (21/22)

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This document is a summary of the article titled 'Procrastination and the Priority of Short-Term Mood Regulation: Consequences for Future Self' (Sirois et al., 2014). This article is listed as the essential reading for week 5 of the module 'Self-Regulation' (C8894) for the year 2021/2022. Reference...

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  • August 23, 2021
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Self-Regulation (C8894): Essential Reading, Week 5

Procrastination and the Priority of Short-Term Mood Regulation:
Consequences for Future Self
Sirois, F., & Pychyl, T. (2013). Procrastination and the priority of short ‐term mood
regulation: Consequences for future self. Social and personality psychology
compass, 7(2), 115-127.

Procrastination Voluntary delay of an intended action, even though one knows that they
will be worse off for the delay (e.g., Steele, 2007). (Page 115)

 If an individual chooses to voluntarily delay a task, this shows that self-regulation
(SR) has been broken down. This breakdown usually occurs when one is faced
with an aversive task (i.e., boring; irritating). (Page 115)
 By procrastinating, people prioritise their current mood over the potential
consequences of inaction for their future self. (Page 116)

Procrastination: Quintessential Self-Regulatory Failure

 Measures of procrastination share variance with various core personality traits,
such as conscientiousness. (Big Five) (e.g., Watson, 2001) (Page 116)
 Procrastination is associated with task characteristics, such as timing of
associated task rewards (e.g., O’Donoghue & Rabin, 1999) or perceived
aversiveness of a task (e.g., Blunt & Pychyl, 2000). (Page 116)
 Procrastination can be seen as a lack of self-control (SC), in the context of
engaging in a task at an appropriate time. (Page 116)
 Tice and Bratslavsky (2000) suggest that focusing on regulating mood and feeling
states in the short term can result in a failure of SC in other connected areas in
our existence. (Page 117)
 Tice and Bratslavsky (2000, p. 153): “Even a seemingly artificially induced
negative mood proved to be enough to make people postpone an important SC
goal”. (Page 117)
 Interventions such as positive mood induction (Tice, Baumeister, Shmueli, &
Muraven, 2007) or self-affirmation (Schmeichel, Vohs, 2009) restore SR. (Page
117)
 Prioritising the repair of short-term mood usually results in the individual feeling
worse, even if immediate positive change was necessary. (Page 117)
 The present self does not anticipate consequences to the future self. (Tappolet,
2010)

Procrastination and the Future Self

 Temporal perspective: A focus on short-term mood repair characterised by
procrastination suggests that the individual prioritises immediate positive mood
more so than long-term goals and rewards. Additionally, this suggests a
prioritisation of the present self over the needs of the future self. (Page 118)
 Mindfulness is beneficial for maintaining self-regulation because it reduces stress
(Brown & Ryan, 2003) and allows non-judgemental awareness of discrepancies
between current and desired future states that may increase persistence on
challenging tasks (Evans, Baer, & Segerstrom, 2009).
 A focus on the gap between one’s present and future self may lead to negative
mood states. (Page 118)

Procrastination and the Process of Temporal Mood Regulation

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