Journal of experimental psychology. Animal learning and cognition, volume 45, issue 3, pages 259-279
Cognitive and behavioral training interventions to promote self-control.
Travis Smith
1
,
Kelsey Panfil
1
,
CARRIE BAILEY
1
,
Kimberly Kirkpatrick
1
1
Department of Psychological Sciences.
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2019-05-09
scimago Q2
SJR: 0.662
CiteScore: 2.9
Impact factor: 1.2
ISSN: 23298456, 23298464
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
Abstract
This review article discusses various cognitive and behavioral interventions that have been developed with the goal of promoting self-controlled responding. Self-control can exert a significant impact on human health and impulsive behaviors are associated with a wide range of diseases and disorders, leading to the suggestion that impulsivity is a trans-disease process. The self-control interventions include effort exposure, reward discrimination, reward bundling, interval schedules of reinforcement, impulse control training, and mindfulness training. Most of the interventions have been consistently shown to increase self-control, except for mindfulness training. Some of the successful interventions are long-lasting, whereas others may be transient. Most interventions are domain-specific, targeting specific cognitive and behavioral processes that relate to self-control rather than targeting overall self-control. For example, effort exposure appears to primarily increase effort tolerance, which in turn can improve self-control. Similarly, interval schedules primarily target interval timing, which promotes self-controlled responses. A diagram outlining a proposed set of intervention effects on self-control is introduced to motivate further research in this area. The diagram suggests that the individual target processes of the interventions may potentially summate to produce general self-control, or perhaps even produce synergistic effects. In addition, it is suggested that developing a self-control profile may be advantageous for aligning specific interventions to mitigate specific deficits. Overall, the results indicate that interventions are a promising avenue for promoting self-control and may help to contribute to changing health outcomes associated with a wide variety of diseases and disorders. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).
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