Authors
Junhua Dang, Paul Barker, Anna Baumert, Margriet Bentvelzen, Elliot Berkman, Nita Buchholz, Jacek Buczny, Zhansheng Chen, Valeria De Cristofaro, Lianne de Vries, Siegfried Dewitte, Mauro Giacomantonio, Ran Gong, Maaike Homan, Roland Imhoff, Ismaharif Ismail, Lile Jia, Thomas Kubiak, Florian Lange, Dan-yang Li, Jordan Livingston, Rita Ludwig, Angelo Panno, Joshua Pearman, Niklas Rassi, Helgi B Schiöth, Manfred Schmitt, A Timur Sevincer, Jiaxin Shi, Angelos Stamos, Yia Chin Tan, Mario Wenzel, Oulmann Zerhouni, Li-wei Zhang, Yi-jia Zhang, Axel Zinkernagel
Publication date
2021
Journal
Social Psychological and Personality Science
Volume
12
Issue
1
Pages
14-24
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Description
There is an active debate regarding whether the ego depletion effect is real. A recent preregistered experiment with the Stroop task as the depleting task and the antisaccade task as the outcome task found a medium-level effect size. In the current research, we conducted a preregistered multilab replication of that experiment. Data from 12 labs across the globe (N = 1,775) revealed a small and significant ego depletion effect, d = 0.10. After excluding participants who might have responded randomly during the outcome task, the effect size increased to d = 0.16. By adding an informative, unbiased data point to the literature, our findings contribute to clarifying the existence, size, and generality of ego depletion.
Total citations
2020202120222023202463134425
Scholar articles
J Dang, P Barker, A Baumert, M Bentvelzen… - Social Psychological and Personality Science, 2021
J Buczny, J Dang, P Barker, A Baumert, M Bentvelzen… - Social Psychological and Personality Science, 2021