Paperback : HK$671.00
From leading authorities, this significantly revised and expanded handbook is a highly regarded reference in a rapidly growing field. It thoroughly examines the conscious and unconscious processes by which people manage their behavior and emotions, control impulses, and strive toward desired goals. Chapters explore such vital issues as why certain individuals have better self-control than others; how self-regulation shapes, and is shaped by, social relationships; underlying brain mechanisms and developmental pathways; and which interventions can improve peopleaEURO (TM)s self-control. The volume also addresses self-regulatory failures and their consequences, with chapters on attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, criminality, addictions, and money management challenges. As a special bonus, purchasers of the third edition can download a supplemental e-book featuring two notable, highly cited chapters from the second edition.
New to This Edition
*Incorporates current topic areas, theories, and empirical findings.
*Updated throughout, with 21 new chapters and numerous new authors.
*Cutting-edge topics: implicit self-regulation processes, the role of physical needs and processes (such as the importance of sleep), the benefits of dampening positivity, the frequency and consequences of emotional control in the workplace, and self-regulation training.
*Expanded coverage of motivational factors, romantic relationships, and lapses of self-control.
*Supplemental e-book featuring selected chapters from the prior edition.
From leading authorities, this significantly revised and expanded handbook is a highly regarded reference in a rapidly growing field. It thoroughly examines the conscious and unconscious processes by which people manage their behavior and emotions, control impulses, and strive toward desired goals. Chapters explore such vital issues as why certain individuals have better self-control than others; how self-regulation shapes, and is shaped by, social relationships; underlying brain mechanisms and developmental pathways; and which interventions can improve peopleaEURO (TM)s self-control. The volume also addresses self-regulatory failures and their consequences, with chapters on attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, criminality, addictions, and money management challenges. As a special bonus, purchasers of the third edition can download a supplemental e-book featuring two notable, highly cited chapters from the second edition.
New to This Edition
*Incorporates current topic areas, theories, and empirical findings.
*Updated throughout, with 21 new chapters and numerous new authors.
*Cutting-edge topics: implicit self-regulation processes, the role of physical needs and processes (such as the importance of sleep), the benefits of dampening positivity, the frequency and consequences of emotional control in the workplace, and self-regulation training.
*Expanded coverage of motivational factors, romantic relationships, and lapses of self-control.
*Supplemental e-book featuring selected chapters from the prior edition.
I. Basic Regulatory Processes
1. Self-Regulation of Action and Affect, Charles S. Carver &
Michael F. Scheier
2. The Self-Regulation of Emotion: Theoretical and Empirical
Advances, Sander L. Koole & Amelia Aldao
3. Self-Control and Ego Depletion, Heather M.Maranges & Roy F.
Baumeister
4. Self-Regulation of Implicit Social Cognition, Andrew M. Rivers,
Jimmy Calanchini, & Jeffrey W. Sherman
5. Desire and Self-Regulation, Wilhelm Hofmann & Kathleen D.
Vohs
6. The Role of Habits in Self-Control, Wendy Wood
II. Cognitive, Physiological, and Neurological Dimensions of
Self-Regulation
7. The Cognitive Neuroscience of Self-Regulatory Failure, Dylan D.
Wagner & Todd F. Heatherton
8. Pause and Plan: The Physiology of Self-Regulation, Suzanne C.
Segerstrom, Ian A. Boggero, & Daniel R. Evans
9. Consensus versus Anarchy in the Senate of the Mind: On the Roles
of High Level versus Low Level Construal in Self-Control, Jessica
J. Carnevale & Kentaro Fujita
10. Beyond Limited Resources: Self-Control Failure as the Product
of Shifting Priorities, Michael Inzlicht & Brandon J.
Schmeichel
11. The Essential Role of Sleep in Self-Regulation, Zlatan Krizan &
Garret Hisler
12. Automatic Self-Regulation: From Habit to Goal Pursuit, Esther
K. Papies & Henk Aarts
13. Planning Promotes Goal Striving, Peter M. Gollwitzer &
Gabrielle Oettingen
III. Social, Organizational, and Cultural Dimensions of
Self-Regulation
14. Trust and the Perception of Self-Control: Knowing When to Trust
Others, Catrin Finkenauer & Francesca Righetti
15. Self-Regulation as a Transactive Process: Reconceptualizing the
Unit of Analysis for Goal Setting, Pursuit, and Outcomes, Eli J.
Finkel, Gráinne M. Fitzsimons, & Michelle R. vanDellen
16. Regulation Processes in Romantic Relationships, Jeffry A.
Simpson, Nickola C. Overall, Allison K. Farrell, & Yuthika U.
Girme
17. Religion and Self-Regulation: Integrating Skills-Based and
Motivation-Based Accounts, Kristin Laurin & Aaron C. Kay
18. Focusing in on the Emotion Laborer: Emotion Regulation at Work,
Drew B. Mallory & Deborah E. Rupp
IV. Personality and Self-Regulation
19. Impulsivity as a Personality Trait, Colin G. DeYoung & Amanda
R. Rueter
20. The Emerging Field of Positive Emotion Dysregulation, Alta du
Pont, Keith Welker, Kirsten E. Gilbert, & June Gruber
21. Grit: Sustained Self-Regulation in the Service of Superordinate
Goals, Lauren Eskreis-Winkler, James J. Gross, & Angela L.
Duckworth
22. Varieties of Self-Control and Their Personality Correlates,
Rick H. Hoyle & Erin K. Davisson
V. Development and Self-Regulation
23. The Development of Executive Functions and Self-Regulation: A
Bidirectional Psychobiological Model, Clancy Blair
24. Self-Regulation Training, Elliot T. Berkman
25. Effortful Control: Relations with Emotion Regulation,
Adjustment, and Socialization in Childhood, Nancy Eisenberg,
Cynthia L. Smith, & Tracy L. Spinrad
26. Aging and Self-Regulation, William von Hippel & Julie D.
Henry
VI. Self-Regulation Challenges
27. Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder and Self-Regulation:
Taking an Evolutionary Perspective on Executive Functioning,
Russell A. Barkley
28. Self-Control and Crime: Theory, Research, and Remaining
Puzzles, Michael Rocque, Chad Posick, & Alex R. Piquero
29. Deciding to Curtail Persistence, Joseph T. McGuire & Joseph W.
Kable
30. Problems with Positive Thinking and How to Overcome Them,
Gabriele Oettingen & Julie Y. A. Cachia
31. Self-Regulatory Failure and Addiction, Michael A. Sayette &
Kasey G. Creswell
32. The Role of Self-Regulation in Financial Well-Being, Poornima
Vinoo, Kim Ly, & Dilip Soman
Supplemental E-book Featuring Selected Chapters from the Second
Edition:
*Self-Efficacy Beliefs and the Architecture of Personality: On
Knowledge, Appraisal, and Self-Regulation, Daniel Cervone, Nilly
Mor, Heather Orom, William G. Shadel, & Walter D. Scott
*Promotion and Prevention Systems: Regulatory Focus Dynamics within
Self-Regulatory Hierarchies, Abigail A. Scholer & E. Tory
Higgins
Kathleen D. Vohs, PhD, is Associate Professor of Marketing at
the Carlson School of Management at the University of Minnesota.
She holds a McKnight Presidential Fellowship and is the Board of
Overseers Professor of Marketing. Dr. Vohs has more than 120
professional publications, including six books. Her research is
concerned with self-regulation, particularly in regard to impulsive
spending and eating, decision making, self-esteem, the fear and
feeling of being duped, self-escape behaviors, and the psychology
of money.
Roy F. Baumeister, PhD, is Professor Emeritus of Psychology at
Florida State University and at the University of Queensland in
Australia. One of social psychology's most highly cited
researchers, Dr. Baumeister has been conducting research, teaching,
and thinking about the human self since the 1970s. His work spans
multiple topics, including self and identity, self-control,
interpersonal rejection and the need to belong, sexuality and
gender, violence and evil, self-esteem, self-presentation, emotion,
decision making, consciousness and free will, and finding meaning
in life. He has written approximately 700 professional publications
as well as numerous books for professionals and the general public.
Dr. Baumeister is a recipient of awards including the Distinguished
Lifetime Achievement Award from the International Society for Self
and Identity and the William James Fellow Award, the highest honor
of the Association for Psychological Science.
"Self-regulation is emerging as a unifying theme that bridges the
biological, behavioral, and social sciences. This book presents a
panoramic review of recent theoretical developments and
cutting-edge research in the field. The contributors--leading
self-regulation researchers--provide an in-depth exploration of the
basic mechanisms underlying self-control and their implications for
improving people’s pursuit of personal, interpersonal, and group
goals. This is a valuable resource for graduate students,
researchers, and practitioners interested in the science of
self-regulation."--Yaacov Trope, PhD, Department of Psychology, New
York University
"An all-star roster of the top researchers present their most
interesting ideas on self-control: what it is, how it works, how it
develops, why some are better at it than others, and why we all
experience failures from time to time. This is simply essential
reading for any student, scholar, or researcher wanting to
understand both the basics and the cutting edge of self-regulation
research. This is not a book you will possibly read in one sitting.
This is a book so packed with information that you will be coming
back to it again and again for years to come."--Nicholas Epley,
PhD, Booth School of Business, University of Chicago
"Vohs and Baumeister have assembled world-renowned scholars to
offer a comprehensive examination of research, theory, and practice
in self-regulation. Capturing the latest thinking on
self-regulation and its relation to human behavior, the third
edition of the Handbook takes a fresh look at basic theory and at
the contributions that research on the topic can make in multiple
applied fields. I consider this the essential reader on
self-regulation for both experienced and aspiring researchers in
areas as diverse as social psychology, behavioral science, and
cognitive neuroscience."--Martin S. Hagger, PhD, John Curtin
Distinguished Professor, School of Psychology and Speech Pathology,
Curtin University, Australia
"If there's one thing all psychologists agree on, it's that
self-regulation matters for success. How we can foster it, though,
remains an open question. In this volume, foremost scholars Vohs
and Baumeister bring together diverse, state-of-the-art views in
what can only be described as an integrative masterpiece. I'm
certain the third edition of this handbook is destined to be a
classic."--David DeSteno, PhD, Department of Psychology,
Northeastern University
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