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Inducing illusory control ensures persistence when rewards fade and when others outperform us.


ABSTRACT: Persisting even when the rewards of continued effort are fading is essential for achieving long-term goals, skills, and good health, alike. Yet, we often quit when things get hard. Here, we tested whether augmenting the feeling of control through external measures increases persistence under such discouraging circumstances. In two laboratory experiments, we first induced illusory control by manipulating the base-rate of positive outcomes and then tested the effect of this elevation of participants' perceived control upon their persistence under diminishing returns and in a competition against a stronger opponent. Induced illusory control significantly enhanced people's persistence in both of these motivationally challenging situations. Our findings demonstrate that motivation is dependent upon perceived, rather than objective, control, and reveal that this can be leveraged to counteract quitting behavior when things get hard, for instance in rehabilitation, physical activity interventions, or other training settings.

SUBMITTER: Studer B 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC7399668 | biostudies-literature | 2020 Aug

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Inducing illusory control ensures persistence when rewards fade and when others outperform us.

Studer Bettina B   Geniole Shawn N SN   Becker Maike L ML   Eisenegger Christoph C   Knecht Stefan S  

Psychonomic bulletin & review 20200801 4


Persisting even when the rewards of continued effort are fading is essential for achieving long-term goals, skills, and good health, alike. Yet, we often quit when things get hard. Here, we tested whether augmenting the feeling of control through external measures increases persistence under such discouraging circumstances. In two laboratory experiments, we first induced illusory control by manipulating the base-rate of positive outcomes and then tested the effect of this elevation of participan  ...[more]

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