Willpower and performance?

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In summary, the conversation touches on the topic of willpower and its effects on superhuman efforts, as well as ways to increase willpower and stamina. It also discusses the role of meditation in strengthening willpower and the potential negative effects of dieting on self-control. The conversation also touches on the concept of true willpower and the ability to resist temptation.
  • #1
hivesaeed4
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I've got a few questions.

First of all I've heard a lot that willpower is the cause of sometimes superhuman efforts like keeping awake for several days in a row, walking beyond one's physical capability, performing even when under severe resistance or extreme pain etc. What I first of all want to know is all this (or even a part of it) true? And how does will power actually cause such super human efforts?

I'd also like to know how exactly does one increase his/her willpower (sorry if its a stupid question but I'd really like to know)? Is it by lengthy and strenous physical activity or also by doing stuff which normally you'd hate and avoid( where the challenge lies mentally)?

Lastly I'd like to know how does one increase his stamina? Is it just by regularly doing strenous physical exercises or something else?
 
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  • #2
Help, anybody?
 
  • #3
hivesaeed4 said:
Help, anybody?
Willpower is placebo:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/27/opinion/sunday/willpower-its-in-your-head.html

Willpower is paradoxical:
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=the-willpower-paradox

Willpower is allovertheplace:
http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog...ive-temptations-actually-boost-your-willpower

Willpower is about allocating attention:
http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2012/01/the-willpower-trick/

I think willpower is increased by doing anything that requires willpower: exercise it and it will get stronger.
 
  • #5
Attention is my problem. I feel like I could take over the world if I could just focus on one thing at a time. I've tried meditating again and again. I try it every day, but thoughts keep rushing through my head and I just can't seem to do it.

The problem is only compounded by studies showing that the very act of dieting can make it even harder to resist temptation. In a 2007 experiment, Roy Baumeister — the influential psychologist behind the ego-depletion model of willpower and co-author of the interesting Willpower — gave students an arduous attention task, in which they had to watch a boring video while ignoring words at the bottom of the screen. Then, the students drank a glass of lemonade. Half of the students got lemonade with real sugar, while the other half got a drink made with Splenda. On a series of subsequent tests of self-control, the group given fake sugar performed consistently worse. The literal lack of sugar in their prefrontal cortex, that neural “muscle” behind willpower, made it even harder to not give in.

hmmm.. So I should either eat large amounts of sugar while I study or completely break my dependence on sugar and never eat it again. (outside of fruit and veg and bead etc.)

That was a great article thanks for posting it, I read about the experiment with the kids and the marshmallows in a few places but I never put any stock in the methods the kids used to stop themselves from eating, I just kind of laughed because it's silly to think of somebody covering their eyes and singing a song when faced with a marshmallow they know they shouldn't eat.
 
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  • #6
RabbitWho said:
...

Meditation is definitely slow way to advance and full of pitfalls. There are number of things that needed to be balanced just right, like activity/passivity, practice/theory etc.

Let me recommend this book.

There is also this guy who writes a lot about results of meditation.
 
  • #7
RabbitWho said:
Attention is my problem. I feel like I could take over the world if I could just focus on one thing at a time. I've tried meditating again and again. I try it every day, but thoughts keep rushing through my head and I just can't seem to do it.

The problem is only compounded by studies showing that the very act of dieting can make it even harder to resist temptation. In a 2007 experiment, Roy Baumeister — the influential psychologist behind the ego-depletion model of willpower and co-author of the interesting Willpower — gave students an arduous attention task, in which they had to watch a boring video while ignoring words at the bottom of the screen. Then, the students drank a glass of lemonade. Half of the students got lemonade with real sugar, while the other half got a drink made with Splenda. On a series of subsequent tests of self-control, the group given fake sugar performed consistently worse. The literal lack of sugar in their prefrontal cortex, that neural “muscle” behind willpower, made it even harder to not give in.

hmmm.. So I should either eat large amounts of sugar while I study or completely break my dependence on sugar and never eat it again. (outside of fruit and veg and bead etc.)

That was a great article thanks for posting it, I read about the experiment with the kids and the marshmallows in a few places but I never put any stock in the methods the kids used to stop themselves from eating, I just kind of laughed because it's silly to think of somebody covering their eyes and singing a song when faced with a marshmallow they know they shouldn't eat.
If your blood sugar is low you start to feel miserable, of course, and that interferes with concentration. Sugar isn't the "willpower food" though, any more than any food is. If you're low on anything you'll feel bad and unable to concentrate.

Removing a temptation, or diverting your attention from it, does nothing to build your will power IMO. True willpower is the ability to have it right in front of you and not eat it. An alcoholic, for example, is not on safe ground until they can go into a bar and easily order a coffee or soft drink and sit there without any danger of breaking down and ordering alcohol. In other words, you have to be able to bully through the surge of weakness that seems to arise when you contemplate cutting back on food.
 
  • #8
zoobyshoe said:
If your blood sugar is low you start to feel miserable, of course, and that interferes with concentration. Sugar isn't the "willpower food" though, any more than any food is. If you're low on anything you'll feel bad and unable to concentrate.

I disagree with that being low on suger causes weak concentration. See this.

Results: When the subjects received the near calorie-free diets, mean calorie consumption totaled 1311 kJ (313 kcal) over the testing period. During the fully fed treatment sessions, the subjects consumed a mean of 9612 kJ/d (2294 kcal/d), which matched their individual, daily energy requirements. Satiety and interstitial glucose concentrations were lower during the calorie-deprived diet (P < 0.001) than during the fully fed diet. There were no detectable effects of calorie deprivation on any aspect of cognitive performance, ambulatory vigilance, activity, or sleep. The mood states assessed, including fatigue, were not affected by calorie deprivation.
 
  • #9
Meditation advocates claim that meditation increase willpower (the idea being that you're practicing concentrating).
 
  • #10
Alesak said:
I disagree with that being low on suger causes weak concentration. See this.

Very interesting study. It strongly suggests the feeling of being hungry is more distracting than actually being calorie deprived. As long as you feel full and don't know your calorie intake has dropped dramatically, you're fine. Hehe. I wonder how long that can last.
 
  • #11
I chew gum a lot when I study, mostly to avoid returning library books with chewed corners. I think that's a "kinetic learner" thing.
 
  • #12
zoobyshoe said:
Very interesting study. It strongly suggests the feeling of being hungry is more distracting than actually being calorie deprived. As long as you feel full and don't know your calorie intake has dropped dramatically, you're fine. Hehe. I wonder how long that can last.

Yeah, before that I thought exactly the same as you. I always felt like I have no concentration after I have not eaten half a day or something, but when I try it now, after finding that study, I don't feel like that anymore :) Hunger fades quite quickly, I find.

People seem to be seriously bad at evaluating their own mental performace. There was a study that tested temporarily mentaly disadvantaged people(I don't remember what was cause of this) and even though objective tests showed they had significantly lower scores, the affected people swore they feel entirely ok.

So the next time you feel like sh/t - you maybe really only feel like that!
 
  • #13
RabbitWho said:
I think that's a "kinetic learner" thing.

Maybe not. These "learner types" seem to be another myth.
 
  • #14
Alesak said:
Yeah, before that I thought exactly the same as you. I always felt like I have no concentration after I have not eaten half a day or something, but when I try it now, after finding that study, I don't feel like that anymore :) Hunger fades quite quickly, I find.
I hadn't eaten yet earlier when I read your post. I decided to push it. It's one A.M. and I still haven't had anything to eat all day. I don't feel too bad. I'm going to see if I can fall asleep this way.
 
  • #15
zoobyshoe said:
I hadn't eaten yet earlier when I read your post. I decided to push it. It's one A.M. and I still haven't had anything to eat all day. I don't feel too bad. I'm going to see if I can fall asleep this way.

Look at this. It seems two day a week fasting can have some benefical effects.

I always eat in the evening (because I have trouble sleeping while hungry!) and on selected days have about 24-hours of no-eating. Sometimes these 24-hours are entirely fine but sometimes they are torture. I still don't know the cause.
 
  • #16
Alesak said:
Look at this. It seems two day a week fasting can have some benefical effects.

I always eat in the evening (because I have trouble sleeping while hungry!) and on selected days have about 24-hours of no-eating. Sometimes these 24-hours are entirely fine but sometimes they are torture. I still don't know the cause.

That's not definitive, however, and it might lead to infertility.
 
  • #17
Alesak said:
Maybe not. These "learner types" seem to be another myth.
I really don't feel like they are a myth since I'm a teacher and I see them in my every day life. It seems as clear as day that they exist. I mean I see them everywhere. If neuroscience hasn't caught up with common sense yet then I think that's a problem with neuroscience.

I mean what does it even have to do with them. "I find it easier to learn when I am walking around or moving" "ah but we have no proof of that! You are wrong! Sit still!"

The thing is I would never say "you're an auditory learner so I'm only going to talk to you and not help you in other way" because most people learn in all 3 ways but in differing degrees, and it's important for them to figure out what helps them the most. In class I try to get everybody doing everything.
 
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  • #18
Alesak said:
Look at this. It seems two day a week fasting can have some benefical effects.
I can't help but think we evolved to live off our fat stores for longer periods than people think. The whole reason we get fat is to store energy during "feast" periods, when food supplies were plentiful, and use that fat to survive during "famine" periods, especially winter. It's plausible to me that our current problems are not the urge to over eat, but the lack of naturally occurring famine periods to use up what we've stored. Deliberate occasional fasting might represent a return to a cycle we evolved to handle better than constant "feast" conditions, which we're now capable of.

I always eat in the evening (because I have trouble sleeping while hungry!) and on selected days have about 24-hours of no-eating. Sometimes these 24-hours are entirely fine but sometimes they are torture. I still don't know the cause.
I'm the same. It's much easier to not eat all day and then have a meal before going to bed. An 800-1000 calorie meal after 24 hours of not eating feels like a vastly larger meal than it otherwise would, and I fall asleep pretty easily afterward.

There's usually a couple episodes of hunger pangs during the day, and that's where you apply your will power. The hunger does actually subside in a few minutes.
 
  • #19
Sounds like a bad idea to me. How many people suffer from some form of IBS? 1 in 3? I forget. Fasting with IBS will give you the worst ****s imaginable!
 
  • #20
RabbitWho said:
Sounds like a bad idea to me. How many people suffer from some form of IBS? 1 in 3? I forget.
This paper says it's more like 1 in 10:

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15239910

Fasting with IBS will give you the worst ****s imaginable!
So, those without IBS shouldn't fast because those with it will experience discomfort?

Maybe the ones with IBS could fast by eating the non-caloric food in the study.
 
  • #21
zoobyshoe said:
So, those without IBS shouldn't fast because those with it will experience discomfort?


?
 

1. What is willpower and how does it affect performance?

Willpower is the ability to resist short-term temptations in order to meet long-term goals. It can affect performance by helping individuals stay focused, motivated, and persistent in achieving their goals.

2. Can willpower be improved or strengthened?

Yes, willpower can be improved through practice and training. Studies have shown that regularly practicing self-control tasks and setting specific goals can help strengthen one's willpower.

3. How does stress impact willpower and performance?

Stress can deplete an individual's willpower and hinder their performance. When we are stressed, our bodies produce cortisol which can impair our decision-making abilities and make it harder to resist temptations.

4. Are there any strategies for increasing willpower and improving performance?

Yes, there are several strategies for increasing willpower and improving performance. These include setting specific and achievable goals, practicing self-control techniques, managing stress levels, and creating a supportive environment.

5. Can willpower and performance be measured or quantified?

Yes, willpower and performance can be measured through various psychological and behavioral tests. These tests can assess an individual's self-control abilities and their ability to achieve long-term goals.

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