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Self-Regulation: core elemets

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Goal setting Intrinsic v. extrinsic Action identification / proximal v. distal Self-evaluative reactions: Self-discrepancies Affective / motivational responses – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Self-Regulation: core elemets


1
Self-Regulation core elemets
  • Goal setting
  • Intrinsic v. extrinsic
  • Action identification / proximal v. distal
  • Self-evaluative reactions
  • Self-discrepancies
  • Affective / motivational responses
  • Expectancies for goal-related behavioral
    performance
  • Self-efficacy
  • Outcome expectancies

2
Perceived discrepancies Higgins Model
  • Discrepancies between standards and perceived
    self
  • Underlie intentions for ongoing / future behavior
  • Comprise behavioral standards
  • Key element in behavioral comparator

3
Higgins model of self-discrepancy
Possible Selves Possible Selves Possible Selves
Actual

Core assumptions
Ought
Ideal
Self - concept
Self - guide Extrinsic motivation
Self - guide Intrinsic motivation
  • Self-focused attention
  • Multiple sources of discrepancies
  • Specific discrepancies ? specific affective
    behavioral outcomes.
  • Construct availability stable schema, individual
    differences
  • Construct accessibility situational access to
    construct transient affective state
  • Rational operator
  • Action identification theory
  • Range of high ?? low level action identification

4
Actual / own ?? Ideal / own
Possible Selves Possible Selves Possible Selves
Actual


Ought
Ideal
  • Perceived external norms standards
  • Lower action identification more behavioral /
    procedural
  • Extrinsic source of self-discrepancies
  • Internal standards
  • High action identification end states, ultimate
    goals.
  • Intrinsic self-discrepancies

Own
Other / social
5
Goal discrepancies motivation
Actual ?? Ought Actual ?? Ideal
Modest discrepancy Extrinsic motivation for goals Intrinsic motivation for goals
Strong discrepancy Depression, helplessness Guilt, anxiety
6
Higgins basic discrepancy ?? affect link
7
Actual / own ?? Ideal / own
Ought Actual Ideal
Own
Other / social
  • Goals
  • Intrinsically motivated
  • High persistence
  • Perceived discrepancy
  • Disappointment, dissatisfaction.
  • Approach outcome Enhanced motivation /
    persistence

8
Actual / own ?? Ideal / other
Ought Actual Ideal
Own
Other / social
  • Goals
  • Mixed extrinsic / intrinsic
  • Moderate persistence
  • Perceived discrepancy
  • Dejection, shame, anticipated disappointment
  • Discrepancy x self-efficacy interaction

9
Perceived discrepancy x expectancies
Efficacy (or outcome) expectancies
Low accessibility of actual ?? ideal discrepancy
High accessibility of actual ?? ideal discrepancy
Withdrawal, avoidant coping
Task persistence, approach coping
10
Actual / own ?? Ought / other
Ought Actual Ideal
Own
Other / social
  • Goals
  • Wholly extrinsic motivation
  • Low persistence, low resistance to barriers
  • Perceived discrepancy
  • Fear, perceived threat, resentment (?)
  • Avoidance

11
Actual / own ?? Ought / own
Ought Actual Ideal
Own
Other / social
  • Goals
  • Introjected motivation
  • Moderate persistence
  • Perceived discrepancy
  • Guilt, self-contempt
  • Lowering of standards?

12
Self-regulation elements 1. Goal setting
  • Stable action schema or script
  • Abelson automatic behavioral scripts
  • Goals as preferences Ajzen attitude models
  • Goals and Action Identification
  • Higher-order identification generalized values
  • Lower-order ID concrete behaviors
  • Houston shifts in ID to serve self-regulation

13
Goals, 2 Action Identifications
High
Low
  • Abstract longer-term, end states
  • Difficult to monitor slow-moving non-specific
  • Typically approach oriented / positive
    affect.
  • Concrete immediate, behavioral intentions
  • Specific, easier to monitor
  • Mix of approach avoidant ( - affect).

14
Self-regulation Basic cybernetic frame
Behavioral intentions
Actual behavior
Available feedback
Behavioral standards
Self-monitoring of ongoing behavior
Behavioral Comparator
15
Self-regulation Basic cybernetic frame
Behavioral intentions
Actual behavior
Available feedback
Behavioral standards
Self-monitoring of ongoing behavior
Behavioral Comparator
  • Other input variables
  • Social norms Cultural values
  • Distal Personal goals / Possible selves
  • Proximal Concrete end-states, do goals
  • Health behavior
  • perceived vulnerability
  • cues to action

16
Self-regulation Basic cybernetic frame
Behavioral intentions
Actual behavior
Available feedback
Behavioral standards
Self-monitoring of ongoing behavior
Behavioral Comparator
  • Other input variables
  • Attitude change / formation
  • Social norms values
  • Ought Ideal selves

17
Self-regulation Basic cybernetic frame
Behavioral intentions
Actual behavior
Available feedback
Behavioral standards
Self-monitoring of ongoing behavior
Behavioral Comparator
  • Other input variables
  • Outcome expectancies
  • Self-efficacy expectancies
  • Action identification
  • High level / general
  • Concrete / specific

18
Self-regulation Basic cybernetic frame
Behavioral intentions
Actual behavior
Available feedback
Behavioral standards
Self-monitoring of ongoing behavior
Behavioral Comparator
  • Other input variables
  • Real effects on environment
  • Nature of outcomes
  • Long-term v. short-term
  • Abstract v. concrete
  • Approach v. avoidant

19
Self-regulation Basic cybernetic frame
Behavioral intentions
Actual behavior
Available feedback
Behavioral standards
Self-monitoring of ongoing behavior
Behavioral Comparator
  • Other input variables
  • Dispositional self-awareness (monitoring v.
    blunting)
  • Coping style vis-a-vis negative affect
  • Approach / instrumental
  • Avoidant / affective / escape

20
Self-regulation Basic cybernetic frame
Behavioral intentions
Actual behavior
Available feedback
Behavioral standards
Self-monitoring of ongoing behavior
Behavioral Comparator
  • Other input variables
  • Correspondence of action identifications
  • Attractor (approach) v. Repeller (avoidant)
    goal
  • Positive feedback loops more salient, detectable
    motivating
  • Negative feedback loops less clearly observable,
    less motivating

21
Potential self-regulation failures
Behavioral intentions
Actual behavior
Available feedback
Behavioral standards
Self-monitoring of ongoing behavior
Behavioral Comparator
  • Loose linkage between attitude / intention ?
    behavior
  • Role of habit / automaticity, contextual
    constraints
  • Social network press for behavioral consistency
  • Ambivalence affective attraction of concrete bad
    behavior
  • versus pallid, high-level action
    identification of being good

22
Potential self-regulation failure, 2
Behavioral intentions
Actual behavior
Available feedback
Behavioral standards
Self-monitoring of ongoing behavior
Behavioral Comparator
  • Clarity specificity of behavioral standards
  • Concreteness specificity of behavioral plans
  • Extrinsic v. intrinsic motivation standards
  • Extrinsic standards / goals ? behavioral
    initiation
  • Intrinsic standards ? behavioral maintenence
  • Correspondence of action identifications
  • High level action identifications (an ideal
    self)
  • versus
  • Initiation of concrete (low level) behaviors.

23
Potential self-regulation failure, 3
Behavioral intentions
Actual behavior
Available feedback
Behavioral standards
Self-monitoring of ongoing behavior
Behavioral Comparator
  • Quality amount of feedback
  • Frequency visibility of target behaviors
  • Availability of feedback from others
  • Simple attention, memory capacity

24
Potential self-regulation failure, 4
Behavioral intentions
Actual behavior
Available feedback
Behavioral standards
Self-monitoring of ongoing behavior
Behavioral Comparator
  • Effortful self-awareness of behavior
  • Automaticity of target behavior Monitoring is
  • Productive for initiating behaviors
  • Disruptive for automatic behaviors
  • Effortful monitoring ? Coping fatigue,
    generally aversive
  • Tediousness of formal monitoring

25
Potential self-regulation failure, 5
Behavioral intentions
Actual behavior
Available feedback
Behavioral standards
Self-monitoring of ongoing behavior
Behavioral Comparator
  • Quality nature of comparison
  • Self-focused attention as prerequisite for
    comparator
  • Clarity specificity of behavioral standards
  • Cognitive avoidance of hot information (i.e.,
    failure)

26
Potential self-regulation failure, 6
Behavioral intentions
Actual behavior
Available feedback
Behavioral standards
Self-monitoring of ongoing behavior
Under what conditions are self-discrepancies
motivating or amotivating?
Behavioral Comparator
  • Negative actual v. ought or ideal
    comparisons
  • Actual versus ought ? anxiety, shame ?
    avoidance
  • ideal ? depression ? amotivation
  • Self-efficacy behavioral change versus avoidance
  • Self-regulatory resource models

27
Potential self-regulation failure, 7
Behavioral intentions
Actual behavior
Available feedback
Behavioral standards
Self-monitoring of ongoing behavior
Behavioral Comparator
  • Lowering standards in the face of failure
  • Motivated downward comparison processes
  • What the hell / giving up phenomenon
  • Cognitive escape / defensive self-evaluation

Critical interaction with self-efficacy
28
Approach Avoidance conflicts
  • Kurt Lewin, Dollard Miller
  • Approach or avoidance of a goal (or state..) have
    drive states or strengths
  • The strength of a drive increases as the animal
    gets closer to the goal
  • Avoidance gradients are steeper than are approach
    gradients
  • Negative information is more salient
  • Pain / avoidance / fear is a stronger motivator
    than positive affect
  • As long as one drive predominates action follows.
  • People can have gt1 gradient
  • If no drive is predominant ? state of equilibrium
  • Resolving equilibrium requires a shift in goals
    or self-awareness

29
Approach gradient
Single motive toward a goal, thus no conflict /
reliable behavioral outcome
Drive strength
Near Far Distance from goal
30
Avoidance gradient
Also single motive
Drive strength
Near Far Distance from goal
31
Two Approach Goals
Two conflicting goals, but gradients differ
enough that conflict is resolved, no equilibrium
state
Drive strength
Near Far Distance from goal
32
Two Behavioral GoalsApproach Approach Conflict
Approach gradients cross as the subject gets
closer to the goals. Resulting equilibrium
requires shift in goal strengths.
Drive strength
Near Far Distance from goal
33
Approach Avoidance Conflict
  • Single goal with both approach avoidance
    gradients.
  • Approach motives (positive conceptualizations)
    more salient to distant abstract goals.
  • Avoidance (concern over negative consequences) is
    more salient to more proximal concrete goals.

Drive strength
  • Resolving equilibrium
  • Not think response
  • Change salience of or information
  • Value attitude congruence frame concrete
    behavior in terms of higher-order goal.

Near Far Distance from goal
34
Self-efficacySources of efficacy judgments
  • Feedback re behavioral subgoals (Cf Karoly,
    Carver models)
  • Sub-goals concrete, specific ? discernable
    feedback
  • Attitude change Behavior ? attitude
  • Guided mastery interventions
  • Modeling
  • Bandura Walters
  • Coping model gtgt Mastery model
  • Controls resources gt rewarded gt simple
    performance
  • Similarity of model to participant Peer-based
    interventions
  • Social persuasion
  • Normative / personal information
  • Social network mechanism?
  • Feedback post performance gt simple attitude
    change
  • Interpretation of somatic information
  • E.g., fear of fear
  • Cognitive representation of disease
  • Miller C-SHIP model Rx to hot disease or
    physical information

35
Perceived control and stress
  • Averill, types of control
  • Behavioral
  • Brown Bereavement ? stress ? mortality
  • Learned helplessness
  • Decisional
  • Singer stress Rx perceived controllability
  • Interpretative
  • Taylor search for meaning coping w/cancer
  • Hopelessness depression
  • Predictive
  • DV literature / Averill data predictability gtgt
    aversiveness

36
Relapse prevention self-efficacy
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