4.4 Article

Energized by Television: Familiar Fictional Worlds Restore Self-Control

Journal

SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGICAL AND PERSONALITY SCIENCE
Volume 4, Issue 3, Pages 299-307

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/1948550612454889

Keywords

self-control; self-regulation; social surrogacy; parasocial; television

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Enacting effortful self-control depletes a finite resource, leaving less self-control available for subsequent effortful tasks. Positive social interaction can restore self-control, but hurtful or effortful social interaction depletes self-control. Given this conflict, people might seek an alternative to social interaction to restore self-control. The current research examines social surrogate restoration-the possibility that people seek a social surrogate when depleted, and that seeking social surrogacy restores self-control. One experiment (Study 1) and one daily diary (Study 2) demonstrate that people seek familiar fictional worlds (e. g., a favorite television program) after exerting effortful self-control. Moreover, immersion in this familiar fictional world restores self-control. Supplementary analyses suggest that it is the social nature of this familiar fictional world that contributes to restoration.

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