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posted by Andrea Griffith in Books

Willpower: Greatest Human Strength

September 29, 2011

BOOKS: "Willpower: Rediscovering the Greatest Human Strength" (The Penguin Press), by Roy F. Baumeister and John Tierney: Self-control, as it turns out, is like a muscle: It can be exhausted from overuse but it can also be strengthened through exercise.
The latter quality is good news since most problems — drug abuse, violence, overspending, underachievement, unhealthy habits — can be traced back to a lack of self-control.

That's according to "Willpower: Rediscovering the Greatest Human Strength," a new book by Florida State University psychologist Roy F. Baumeister and New York Times science writer John Tierney. The authors cite fascinating lab experiments that reveal how the human mind and body work and, less compellingly, profile famous people who have exhibited great self-control and explain how they did it.

In one experiment, college students who had been fasting were put in a room suffused with the smell of freshly baked chocolate chip cookies. Some were allowed to eat cookies, others were offered chocolate and a third group could only snack on radishes.

Researchers left the room to increase the temptation of the radish group. Afterward, the students were given unsolvable puzzles to work on. The first two groups of students attempted them for about 20 minutes, as did a control group of students who hadn't been offered any food. The radish group, however, gave up after 8 minutes. Their effort resisting the sweets earlier had left them with less energy to tackle the puzzles.

Researchers found a similar depletion effect among people called to make decisions all day: members of an Israeli prison parole board. Prisoners whose cases were heard early in the morning were granted parole about 70 percent of the time, compared with less than 10 percent for those who appeared late in the day — even for people serving sentences for identical crimes. Interestingly, the board members' midmorning snack break also made a significant difference: Prisoners appearing right before the break had about a 15 percent chance of being granted parole versus a 70 percent chance for those who came right after the break.

When it comes to child-rearing approaches, the authors tout the benefits of promoting self-control instead of the more in-vogue trend of promoting self-esteem. They tell the story of two Asian-American sisters whose mother would pre-empt supermarket candy whining episodes by telling them they could have a candy bar on the next shopping trip if they read a book during the week.

"Willpower" contains dozens of thought-provoking nuggets like these, including an entire section on the psychology of dieting. These bright spots are unfortunately diluted, however, by a rambling chapter on an African explorer and other instances of unfocused, belabored writing.

-RASHA MADKOUR, Associated Press

(AP Photo/The Penguin Press)

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