"When the going gets tough, who keeps going?" Depletion sensitivity moderates the ego-depletion effect

Publication date

2014-06-24

Authors

Salmon, Stefanie J.ISNI 000000045859493X
Adriaanse, MariekeISNI 0000000394185028
De Vet, Emely
Fennis, Bob M
De Ridder, Denise T DISNI 0000000384941010

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

Abstract

Self-control relies on a limited resource that can get depleted, a phenomenon that has been labeled ego-depletion. We argue that individuals may differ in their sensitivity to depleting tasks, and that consequently some people deplete their self-control resource at a faster rate than others. In three studies, we assessed individual differences in depletion sensitivity, and demonstrate that depletion sensitivity moderates ego-depletion effects. The Depletion Sensitivity Scale (DSS) was employed to assess depletion sensitivity. Study 1 employs the DSS to demonstrate that individual differences in sensitivity to ego-depletion exist. Study 2 shows moderate correlations of depletion sensitivity with related self-control concepts, indicating that these scales measure conceptually distinct constructs. Study 3 demonstrates that depletion sensitivity moderates the ego-depletion effect. Specifically, participants who are sensitive to depletion performed worse on a second self-control task, indicating a stronger ego-depletion effect, compared to participants less sensitive to depletion.

Keywords

Depletion sensitivity, Ego-depletion, Individual differences, Self-control, Self-control endurance, General Psychology

Citation

Salmon, S J, Adriaanse, M A, De Vet, E, Fennis, B M & De Ridder, D T D 2014, '"When the going gets tough, who keeps going?" Depletion sensitivity moderates the ego-depletion effect', Frontiers in Psychology, vol. 5, 647. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00647