Neural
1. Anterior Cingulate Cortex Contributions to Cognitive and
Emotional Processing: A General Purpose Mechanism for Cognitive
Control and Self-Control
Marie K. Krug and Cameron S. Carter
2. Damaged self, damaged control: A component process analysis of
the effects of frontal lobe damage on human decision making
Lesley K. Fellows
3. Working Hard or Hardly Working for those Rose-colored Glasses?:
Behavioral and Neural Evidence for the Automatic Nature of
Unrealistically Positive Self-Perceptions
Jennifer S. Beer
4. Control in the regulation of intergroup bias
David M. Amodio and Patricia G. Devine
5. Integrating Research on Self-Control across Multiple Levels of
Analysis: Insights from Social Cognitive and Affective
Neuroscience
Ethan Kross, Kevin Ochsner
6. Using the Stroop Task to Study Emotion Regulation
Jason Buhle, Tor Wager, Ed Smith
7. Motivational Influences on Cognitive Control: A Cognitive
Neuroscience Perspective
Hannah S. Locke and Todd S. Braver
8. The Common Neural Basis of Exerting Self-Control in Multiple
Domains
Jessica R. Cohen & Matthew D. Lieberman
Mental
9. Working Memory Capacity: Self-control is (in) the Goal
James M. Broadway, Thomas S. Redick, Randall W. Engle
10. The Dynamic Control of Human Actions
Florian Waszak, Anne Springer, Wolfgang Prinz
11. Task switching: Mechanisms underlying rigid vs. flexible self
control
Nachshon Meiran
12. Unconscious influences of attitudes and challenges to
self-control
Deborah L. Hall, B. Keith Payne
13. Self-control over Automatic Associations
Karen Gonsalkorale, Jeffrey W. Sherman, and Thomas J. Allen
14. Perish the Forethought: Premeditation Engenders Misperceptions
of Personal Control
Carey K. Morewedge, Kurt Gray and Daniel M. Wegner
15. The Power of Planning: Self-Control by Effective Goal
Striving
Peter M. Gollwitzer, Caterina Gawrilow, Gabriele Oettingen
16. Unpacking the Self Control Dilemma and Its Modes of
Resolution
Arie W. Kruglanski & Catalina Kopetz
17. Conflict and Control at Different Levels of Self-Regulation
Abigail A. Scholer and E. Tory Higgins
18. Getting Our Act Together: Toward a General Model of
Self-Control
Eran Magen & James J. Gross
19. Implicit Control of Stereotype Activation
Gordon B. Moskowitz, Peizhong Li
20. Ego Depletion and the Limited Resource Model of
Self-Control
Nicole L. Mead, Jessica L. Alquist, Roy F. Baumeister
21. Walking the Line between Goals and Temptations: Asymmetric
Effects of Counteractive Control
Ayelet Fishbach, Benjamin Converse
22. Seeing the Big Picture: A Construal Level Analysis of
Self-Control
Kentaro Fujita, Yaacov Trope, Nira Liberman
23. From Stimulus Control to Self-Control: Towards an Integrative
Understanding of the Processes Underlying Willpower
Ethan Kross, Walter Mischel
Social
24. Self-Control in Groups
John M. Levine, Kira Alexander, and Thomas Hansen
25. Justice and the psychology of self-control
Tom R. Tyler
26. System Justification and the Disruption of Environmental
Goal-Setting:
A Self-Regulatory Perspective
Irina Feygina, Rachel E. Goldsmith, John T. Jost
27. Teleological Behaviorism and the Problem of Self Control
Howard Rachlin
Ran Hassin is an Associate Professor of Psychology at the Hebrew
University.
Kevin Ochsner currently is Associate Professor of Psychology at
Columbia University.
Yaacov Trope has been a Professor of Psychology at New York
University.
"The readable chapters in this book offer a beautiful blend of
social psychology and social neuroscience and establish Self
Control as a new area of psychological science."
-- Gerald L. Clore, Commonwealth Professor of Psychology,
University of Virginia
"Uncovering the neural mechanisms of goal-directed behavior is a
high priority in brain research that will undoubtedly require
experimentation at multiple levels of analysis. To achieve this,
scientists using social, developmental, cognitive, clinical and
neuroscientific approaches must come together. This book is an
inspiring demonstration of how this can be accomplished."
--Mark D'Esposito, Professor of Neuroscience and Psychology and
Director, Henry H. Wheeler Jr. Brain Imaging Center, University of
California, Berkeley
" In this outstanding volume, a stellar group of leading
international researchers discuss the neural, mental and social
processes involved in effective self control. They present
cutting-edge research on this vitally important topic, covering the
conscious as well as the unconscious mechanisms people employ to
regulate their thoughts, feelings and actions. A better
understanding of the psychology of self control is also critically
important in applied fields
such as clinical, counseling, organisational, health, marketing and
sports psychology that all rely on effective self control
strategies to achieve their objectives. This volume provides a
comprehensive
and illuminating review of the latest advances in this fascinating
field, and should become essential reading for researchers,
students and practitioners in psychology and related
disciplines."
-- Joseph P. Forgas, Scientia Professor, The University of New
South Wales
"The mechanisms of self control are being revealed by imaging
studies. This volume reviews these striking new findings and
examines the many fields influenced by the new mechanistic approach
to the problem of volition. Everyone interested in how the brain
implements volition will benefit from this wide ranging
collection."
-- Michael I. Posner, Professor Emeritus, University of Oregon and
Adjunct Professor, Sackler Institute, Weill Medical College
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