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Being able to resist temptation at a young age is crucial for successful functioning yet it can be challenging. According to the Selection, Optimization, and Compensation with Emotion Regulation (SOC-ER) framework, one central element of successful functioning is selection which involves choosing among regulatory options whose resource requirements fits with the amount of available resources an individual possesses. Although conceptually important, direct empirical evidence is lacking. Accordingly, the present study utilised performance based measures to examine the interactive effect of regulatory selection to resist temptation, and individual differences in executive resources, on functioning in young children. Specifically, 39 first grade children that varied in executive resources (working memory capacity, WMC), selected between two major regulatory strategies (reappraisal and distraction) to resist temptation, that varied in their resource demands, and were evaluated on successful functioning (via questionnaires completed by parents, that assess daily-life behaviours requiring executive functioning). Supporting SOC-ER predictions, we found that among children with low (but not high) WMC, choosing the less effortful distraction regulatory strategy was associated with adaptive functioning. Additionally, regulatory choice preferences previously obtained with adults were extended to children. Broad implications are discussed.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02699931.2018.1470494 | DOI Listing |
J Med Case Rep
August 2025
Department of Pediatrics and Child Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, Makerere University, Kampala, Uganda.
Background: Sickle cell disease affects 7.7 million people worldwide, mostly in sub-Saharan Africa. However, due to migration trends, patients with sickle cell disease are increasingly found in the Western world.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAust J Psychol
September 2024
School of Psychology, Shandong Normal University, Jinan, China.
Objective: Intertemporal decision-making ability refers to the ability of individuals to weigh costs and benefits at different time points and make choices, which is crucial for adolescents to resist temptation, improve self-control, and prospection. However, there are rarely studies that have been conducted to directly measure the intertemporal decision-making ability of adolescents.
Method: In this study, adolescents aged 9 to 15 years old were include to finish the measurement, and the intertemporal decision-making ability scale was developed based on three neural networks of intertemporal decision-making.
Sci Rep
July 2025
Department of Biology, University of Florence, Via Madonna del Piano, 6, Sesto Fiorentino, 50019, Florence, Italy.
The ability to resist immediate temptation for a better, delayed outcome is thought to underpin advanced cognition. Traditionally, this ability has been studied in large-brained animals. However, to understand its evolutionary origins, it is necessary to expand the study to species with different life histories and ecological pressures, such as insects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Opin Psychol
October 2025
Department of Psychiatry, Utrecht University Medical Center, Heidelberglaan 100, Utrecht, 3584 CX, The Netherlands. Electronic address:
Psychiatric diagnostic labels can no longer be considered mere neutral descriptors for mental distress; the weight of evidence indicates that they shape reality, often in problematic ways. Providing accurate information about the scientific status of diagnostic labels helps minimize many of these problems. Academic psychiatry and psychology must therefore learn to resist the temptation to reduce human complexity to fixed labels, provide accurate information when labels are applied, consider to separate diagnoses from experienced distress, recognize patients' experiences as legitimate perspectives, and, most importantly, develop the conceptual competence to design and integrate alternative human-centered approaches that go beyond diagnosis-centric practices.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBehav Sci (Basel)
May 2025
Department of Education, Zhejiang Normal University, Jinhua 321004, China.
Stories are widely used by parents or educators to teach children the virtue of honesty. However, the existing empirical findings on the effect of story-telling on children's honesty are limited and mixed. This study examined whether moral stories involving honesty can promote honesty in Chinese preschool children (N = 208).
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