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Self-consciousness, outcome expectancy, and persistence
Authors:Michael F. Scheier  Charles S. Carver
Affiliation:Carnegie-Mellon University USA;University of Miami USA
Abstract:A study investigated persistence as a function of two variables: the disposition to be self-attentive (called private self-consciousness) and outcome feedback on a prior task that was described as closely related to the target task. More specifically, subjects first completed a concealed-figures test and were told that their performances were either very good or very poor. The second test, which ostensibly measured the same abilities, was an insolvable design problem that is commonly used to measure persistence. Feedback concerning prior outcomes had a direct influence on expectancies for the second task, but persistence on that task was a joint function of feedback and self-consciousness. That is, favorable feedback led to greater persistence than did unfavorable feedback, but only among subjects high in self-consciousness. This finding replicates and extends the results of several previous studies. Discussion centers on the relationship between the present research and an earlier experiment which yielded apparently different results.
Keywords:Reprint requests should be directed to Michael F. Scheier   Department of Psychology   Carnegie-Mellon University   Pittsburgh   PA 15213.
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