4.3 Article

Trajectories of boredom in self-control demanding tasks

Journal

COGNITION & EMOTION
Volume 35, Issue 5, Pages 1018-1028

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/02699931.2021.1901656

Keywords

Boredom; ego depletion; self-control; goals; motivation

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The study revealed a complex relationship between self-control and boredom, with high-demand primary tasks leading to increased effort, difficulty, tiredness, and frustration, but without affecting performance in secondary tasks. Higher levels of boredom were associated with lower effort, higher difficulty, tiredness, and frustration, increasing steadily during secondary tasks but generally lower in trials requiring more self-control. Boredom was also found to predict performance in secondary tasks.
Self-control does not always work effectively. Whether this reflects the depletion of a global self-control resource is subject to an ongoing debate. We turned to boredom as a potential confounding variable to advance this debate. In a high-powered experiment (N = 719), participants worked on a primary (transcription) task of varying self-control demands (low, high) and length (2, 4, 8 min), followed by a secondary (Stroop) task with low and high self-control demanding trials. In addition to trait boredom, we measured effort, difficulty, tiredness, frustration, and boredom after the primary task and repeatedly during the secondary task. Effort, difficulty, tiredness, and frustration increased with the demand and duration of the primary task; however, without affecting performance in the secondary task. Importantly, participants rated both the primary and the secondary task as boring, and higher boredom at the state and the trait level was associated with lower effort and higher difficulty, tiredness, and frustration. During the secondary task, boredom increased steadily but was generally lower in more self-control demanding trials. Finally, boredom predicted performance in the secondary task. These results show an intricate relationship between self-control and boredom that research on these two constructs should carefully disentangle.

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