Dataset for: Nurturing Your Self: Measuring and Changing How People Strive For What They Need

DOI

The Operant Motive Test (OMT) integrates the assessment of implicit motives (what people strive for) and self-regulatory processes (how people strive). The present research validated the distinction between self-regulated and not self-regulated (incentive-driven and fearful) motive enactment. Consistent with expectations, self-regulated motive enactment correlated positively with action orientation (N1_total=730 in five published samples) and integrative self-organization (N2=47) and showed pre-post increases after global resilience training (N3=45). A specific self-motivation exercise yielded more self-regulated motive enactment among poor self-regulators (state-oriented) compared to humoristic talk (N4=164) and no exercise conditions, controlling for baseline (N5=97). Findings validate the OMT as sensitive to dispositional and experimental variations in self-regulatory processes and show that short interventions can change how people strive for what they need.

What people strive for (motive contents) and how people strive (self-regulatory processes) are studied in separate fields of psychology and assessed with different measures. The Operant Motive Test (OMT) integrates the assessment of self-regulatory processes and implicit motives. The present research validated the distinction between self-regulated and not self-regulated (incentive-driven, fearful) motive enactment. Consistent with expectations, self-regulated motive enactment correlated positively with dispositional self-regulation (i.e., action orientation, N1_total = 730, re-analyzed in five published samples) and integrative self-organization (N2 = 47) and showed pre-post increases after a multi-faceted three-hour resilience training (N3 = 45). A specific self-motivation exercise yielded more self-regulated motive enactment among poor self-regulators compared to humoristic talk (N4 = 164) and no exercise conditions, controlling for baseline (N5 = 97). Findings validate the OMT as sensitive to dispositional and experimental variations in self-regulation and show that short interventions can change how people strive for what they need.

Dataset for: Baumann, N., & Kuhl, J. (2020). Nurturing your self: measuring and changing how people strive for what they need. The Journal of Positive Psychology, 1–12. https://doi.org/10.1080/17439760.2020.1805503

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.2865
Metadata Access https://api.datacite.org/dois/10.23668/psycharchives.2865
Provenance
Creator Baumann, Nicola
Publisher PsychArchives
Contributor Leibniz Institut Für Psychologie (ZPID); Kuhl, Julius
Publication Year 2020
Rights CC BY-SA 4.0; openAccess; Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike 4.0 International
OpenAccess true
Representation
Language English
Resource Type Dataset
Discipline Social Sciences