1. Priming autonomous and controlling motivation and effects on persistence
- Author
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Stephen Murphy and Ian M. Taylor
- Subjects
Persistence (psychology) ,05 social sciences ,Repeated failure ,050109 social psychology ,030229 sport sciences ,Moderation ,Task (project management) ,Developmental psychology ,Test (assessment) ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychology ,Priming (psychology) ,General Psychology - Abstract
The present studies examined whether priming distinct motivational states influenced persistence at a task designed to promote repeated failure, and post-task plans for engaging in self-regulatory activity. Two double-blind, between-subject experiments (Study 1: N = 58; Study 2: N = 92) involved participants being randomized to Autonomous Motivation, Controlling Motivation, or Neutral prime conditions using a scrambled-sentence test. Participants then attempted an impossible persistence task that promoted repeated failure. Following, participants reported their plans to engage in exercise. Using frequentist and Bayesian analyses, Study 1, Study 2, and an internal meta-analysis showed no differences in persistence or planned exercise across priming conditions, thus contrasting with previous research. Unanticipated moderation effects or motivational priming effects being smaller than those inputted into a priori power analyses may be the most likely reasons for these findings.
- Published
- 2020