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How can people master their own thoughts, feelings, and actions? This question is central to the scientific study of self-regulation. The behavioral side of self-regulation has been extensively investigated over the last decades, but the biological machinery that allows people to self-regulate has mostly remained vague and unspecified. Handbook of Biobehavioral Approaches to Self-Regulation corrects this imbalance. Moving beyond traditional mind-body dualities, the various contributions in the book examine how self-regulation becomes established in cardiovascular, hormonal, and central nervous systems. Particular attention is given to the dynamic interplay between affect and cognition in self-regulation. The book also addresses the psychobiology of effort, the impact of depression on self-regulation, the development of self-regulation, and the question what causes self-regulation to succeed or fail. These novel perspectives provide readers with a new, biologically informed understanding of self-awareness and self-agency. Among the topics being covered are:
Handbook of Biobehavioral Approaches to Self-Regulation provides a wealth of theoretical insights into self-regulation, with great potential for future applications for improving self-regulation in everyday life settings, including education, work, health, and interpersonal relationships. The book highlights a host of exciting new ideas and directions and is sure to provoke a great deal of thought and discussion among researchers, practitioners, and graduate-level students in psychology, education, neuroscience, medicine, and behavioral economics.
Auteur
Guido H.E. Gendolla is Professor of Psychology at the University of Geneva, Switzerland, where he holds the chair for motivation psychology and directs the Geneva Motivation Lab. He earned his diploma in psychology (corresponding to MA) and his PhD at the University of Bielefeld, Germany, and his habilitation in psychology at the University of Erlangen, Germany. Gendolla's research focuses on human motivation and explicit and implicit affect and is mainly concerned with involved psychophysiological processes. Most of his recent research activity was centered on implicit influences in the self-regulation of effort. He has authored numerous publications and his research has been supported by various grants of the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft and the Swiss National Funds.
Mattie Tops is an Assistant Professor of Psychology at the VU University Amsterdam. He earned his diploma in psychology (corresponding to MA) at the Radboud University Nijmegen and his PhD at the University of Groningen, the Netherlands. He has published numerous articles and book chapters on the topics motivation and stress coping. Tops' research focuses on stress (coping) hormones and brain mechanisms of self-regulation. His research has been supported by grants from the Netherlands Organization of Scientific Research (NWO).
Sander L. Koole is an Associate Professor of Psychology at the VU University Amsterdam. He has published many articles and book chapters on the topics emotion regulation and self-regulation. He has co-edited the Handbook of Experimental Existential Psychology and special issues in Social Cognition and Cognition and Emotion. His research has been supported by grants from the Netherlands Organization of Scientific Research (NWO) and the Templeton Foundation. He has been a residential fellow of the Center for Advanced Study in Behavioral Sciences at Stanford University. Koole's research was recognized in 2011 by a Consolidator Grant of the EuropeanResearch Council, a grant that is awarded to researchers with the proven potential to become leaders in their field.
Contenu
Part I: Integrative Perspectives: Introduction: Grounding Self-Regulation in the Brain and Body.- An evolving view of the structure of self-regulation.- Self-regulation in an evolutionary perspective.- Self-regulatory strength: neural mechanisms and implications for training.- The muscle metaphor in self-regulation in the light of current theorizing on muscle physiology.- Protective inhibition of self-regulation and motivation: extending a classic Pavlovian principle to social and personality functioning.- Part II: Interactions between Affect and Cognition in Self-Regulation: Affective modulation of cognitive control: A biobehavioral perspective.- Error monitoring under negative affect: A window into maladaptive self-regulation processes.- External signals of metacognitive control.- From distraction to mindfulness: Psychological and neural mechanisms of attention strategies in self-regulation.- Part III: The Central Nervous System and Self-Regulation: From the reward circuit to the valuation system: How the brain motivates the behavior.- Neural foundations of motivational orientations.- Motus moderari: A neuroscience-informed model for self-regulation of emotion and motivation.- More than the medial prefrontal cortex (MPFC): New advances in understanding the neural foundations of self-insight.- Self-regulation in social decision-making: A neurobiological perspective.- Part IV: Self-Regulation: Mental effort: Brain and autonomic correlates in health and disease.- Psychobiology of perceived effort during physical tasks.- Bounded effort automaticity: A drama in four parts.- The intensity of behavioral restraint: Determinants and cardiovascular correlates.- Self-striving: How self-focused attention affects effort-related cardiovascular activity.- Future thought and the self-regulation of energization.- Part V: Self-Regulatory Problems and Their Development: Depression and self-regulation: A motivational analysis and insights from effort-related cardiovascular reactivity.- Perinatal developmental origins of self-regulation.- Self-regulation through rumination: Consequences and mechanisms.- Biological aspects of self-esteem and stress.- A basic and applied model of the body-mind system.