Title of article
Emotional and motivational reactions to failure: the role of illusions of control and explicitness of feedback
Author/Authors
Thomas A. Langens، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
10
From page
105
To page
114
Abstract
Previous research has found that illusions of
control (IOC) can buffer against the emotional consequences
of failure and may increase persistence in the face
of failure. Theoretical analyses suggest that IOC are most
closely related to a better mood and higher motivation if
failure feedback is open to reinterpretation. Two experiments
were conducted to test the hypothesis that explicitness
(vs. ambiguousness) of failure feedback moderates the
consequences of IOC following a failure experience. In
accord with predictions, it was found that IOC were subsequently
related to a better mood (Study 1) and higher
persistence (Study 2) if individuals received ambiguous
task-inherent failure feedback. In contrast, explicit failure
feedback seemed to neutralize the beneficial effects of
IOC. These results are discussed with respect to the
adaptiveness of IOC.
Keywords
Illusion of control Persistence and moodfollowing failure Failure feedback
Journal title
MOTIVATION AND EMOTION
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
MOTIVATION AND EMOTION
Record number
711586
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