Title of article
On the emergence of deprivation-reducing behaviors: Subliminal priming of behavior representations turns deprivation into motivation
Author/Authors
Veltkamp، نويسنده , , Martijn and Aarts، نويسنده , , Henk and Custers، نويسنده , , Ruud، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
8
From page
866
To page
873
Abstract
Building on recent research into the emergence of human motivation and goal pursuit in the absence of the conscious awareness of the source of this pursuit, the present article aimed to shed light on how states of deprivation (e.g., deprivation of fluid) actually produce the motivation and corresponding behavior that lifts the deprivation. Two studies established that when participants were relatively deprived of fluids, they experienced enhanced motivation to drink and consumed more fluid in an alleged tasting test, and these effects were more pronounced when the concept of drinking was rendered accessible by subliminal priming. These results suggest that specific motivational goal states and corresponding behaviors do not arise directly from deprivation per se, but that accessible goal-related cognitions play a role in this process. Implications for theory and research on deprivation and non-conscious goal pursuit are briefly discussed.
Keywords
Deprivation , Priming , motivation , Accessibility , Nonconscious goal pursuit
Journal title
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Record number
1958376
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