Day after day an overbearing colleague grates on your nerves. It's a
battle to keep your irritation under wraps. Suddenly, during a
particularly long encounter, you snap-you lose your temper and give your
shocked co-worker a piece of your mind.



Most of us blame our-selves for such lapses in willpower, but new
research suggests that willpower may not be available in an unlimited
supply. Scientists have discovered that a single, brief act of
self-control expends some of the body's fuel, which undermines the
brain's ability to expert further self-discipline.

Researchers at Florida State University <http://www.fsu.edu>   asked
volunteers to perform tasks such as ignoring a distracting stimulus
while watching a video clip or suppressing racial stereotypes during a
five-minute social interaction. These seemingly trivial efforts depleted
glucose in the bloodstream and hindered volunteers' ability to
maintain mental discipline during subsequent tasks. When the study
participants were given a sugar drink to boost their blood glucose
levels, their performance returned to normal. Volunteers who drank an
artificially sweetened drink remained impaired.

"These findings show us that willpower is more than a metaphor,"
notes Matthew Gailliot <http://campus.fsu.edu/profiles/gailliot>  , a
graduate student in psychology who led the research. "It's
metabolically expensive to maintain self-control."

"These are remarkably provocative results, "says Kathleen Vohs
<http://www.csom.umn.edu/Page2075.aspx?type=Faculty&eid=48427263>  , a
psychologist at the University of Minnesota <http://www.umn.edu>  . Her
research suggests that those who exercise self-control are more likely
to make impulse purchases-a finding that fits with the glucose depletion
model. Vohs observes that one tantalizing implication of the results is
that self-control may be toughest for people whose bodies do not utilize
blood glucose property, such as those with type 2 diabetes.
Unfortunately, such as people cannot benefit from the news that a sugar
drink restores mental reserves. Nor should anyone take the findings as
license to go on frequent sugar benders in name of willpower. Although
glucose's precise role in self-regulation is not yet clear, Vohs
says, "We can be assured that it's going to be more nuance than
that."



Happy Leaning,



Yovan P. Putra

www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com>

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