Too depleted to turn in: The relevance of end-of-the-day resource depletion for reducing bedtime procrastination

Publication date

2018-03-14

Authors

Kamphorst, B. A.ISNI 0000000419574477
Nauts, SISNI 0000000419502684
D De Ridder, D TISNI 0000000384941010
Anderson, JoelORCID 0000-0002-4799-2946ISNI 0000000081409203

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Document Type

Article
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Abstract

Bedtime procrastination is an important predictor of sleep insufficiency in the general population (Kroese et al., 2014b), but little is known about the determinants of this self-undermining behavior. As the phenomenon has been conceptualized in the literature as a form of self-regulation failure (Kroese et al., 2014a), we hypothesized that people's self-regulatory resources in the evening would be predictive of going to bed later than they intended. Specifically, we examined whether the cumulative effect of resisting desires, a measure of self-regulatory resource depletion (Hofmann et al., 2012b), relates to bedtime procrastination. Participants (N = 218) reported how many desires they had tried to resist during the previous day and the extent of their bedtime procrastination. Results show that people who attempted to resist more desires were more likely to engage in bedtime procrastination, suggesting that people may be less likely to stick to their intended bedtime after a particularly taxing day. Implications for intervention strategies are discussed.

Keywords

Bedtime procrastination, Behavior change, E-coaching systems, Self-regulation, Sleep, General Psychology

Citation

Kamphorst, B A, Nauts, S, De Ridder, D T D & Anderson, J H 2018, 'Too depleted to turn in : The relevance of end-of-the-day resource depletion for reducing bedtime procrastination', Frontiers in Psychology, vol. 9, no. MAR, 252. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.00252