Abstract
The theory outlined in the present chapter adopts a cognitive approach to motivation. In the pages that follow we describe a research program premised on the notion that the cognitive treatment affords conceptual and methodological advantages enabling new insights into problems of motivated action, self-regulation and self-control. We begin by placing our work in the broader historical context of social psychological theorizing about motivation and cognition. We then present our theoretical notions and trace their implications for a variety of psychological issues including activity-experience, goal-commitment, choice, and substitution. The gist of the chapter that follows describes our empirical research concerning a broad range of phenomena informed by the goal-systemic analysis
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CITATION STYLE
Peter, J., & Kliegel, M. (2018). The age-prospective memory paradox. Clinical and Translational Neuroscience, 2(2), 2514183X1880710. https://doi.org/10.1177/2514183x18807103
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