Abstract :
The ability to disengage from hopeless situations
is critical to goal attainment and effective selfregulation.
Two experiments investigated the effects of
striving to attain success (approach goals) versus striving to
avoid failure (avoidance goals) on persistence. Participants
completed anagrams designed so that less persistence
during an initial set of unsolvable anagrams was beneficial.
In Study 1, participants reported how motivated they were
by approach and avoidance goals. In Study 2, participants
were primed to set approach or avoidance goals. Participants
with avoidance goals persisted longer during failure,
with more intense and enduring emotional distress, than
those with approach goals. Greater anger predicted
spending more time on subsequent unsolvable anagrams
and accounted for differences in persistence. The results
suggest that people with approach goals are better able to
identify when they should disengage during failure, and
disengage more completely, than people with avoidance
goals.