Attentional bias toward waiting time information among individuals with high and low trait self-control when making intertemporal choices |
| |
Authors: | Jiamei He Lei Jin Yuan Guan Hongyan Zi |
| |
Institution: | 1. Department of Psychology, Liaoning Normal University, Dalian, People’s Republic of China;2. Collaborative Innovation Center of Healthy Personality Assessment and Cultivation of Children and Adolescents in Liaoning Province, Dalian, People’s Republic of China jiamei998@126.com;4. Collaborative Innovation Center of Healthy Personality Assessment and Cultivation of Children and Adolescents in Liaoning Province, Dalian, People’s Republic of China |
| |
Abstract: | ABSTRACT The present study aimed to explore whether the modulation effects of attentional biases toward time information representing immediate rewards and delayed rewards differ between individuals with high and low trait self-control. Forty participants with high trait self-control and 40 with low trait self-control were selected based on their responses to the Chinese version of the self-control scale, and they were asked to complete an intertemporal choice task and dot probe task first and then a cue-target task a week later. The results showed that the participants with low trait self-control were more likely to choose immediate rewards than participants with high trait self-control. Furthermore, facilitated attention and difficulty in attention disengagement toward present-related words were found among participants with low trait self-control with higher frequency than among those with high trait self-control. Finally, facilitated attention toward present-related words moderated the indifference points among the participants with low trait self-control. |
| |
Keywords: | Trait self-control immediate information attentional biases moderation effect |
|
|