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Attention drifting in and out: the boredom feedback model

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posted on 2021-05-13, 11:07 authored by Katy Y. Y. Tam, Wijnand A.P. van Tilburg, Christian S. Chan, Eric Raymond IgouEric Raymond Igou, Hakwan Lau
We synthesize established and emerging research to propose a feedback process model that explicates key antecedents, experiences, and consequences of the emotion boredom. The proposed Boredom Feedback Model posits that the dynamic process of boredom resembles a feedback loop that centers on attention shifts instigated by inadequate attentional engagement. Inadequate attentional engagement is a discrepancy between desired and actual levels of attentional engagement and is a product of external and internal influences, reflected in objective resources and cognitive appraisals. The model sheds light on several essential yet unresolved puzzles in the literature, including how people learn to cope with boredom, how to understand the relation between self-control and boredom, how the roles of attention and meaning in boredom can be integrated, why boredom is associated with both high- and low-arousal negative emotions, and what contributes to chronic boredom. The model offers testable hypotheses for future research.

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The development of a blood vessel regeneration therapy for the purpose of stroke prevention in high-risk group

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

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History

Publication

Personality and Social Psychology Review;

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Note

peer-reviewed

Other Funding information

University Grants Committee of Hong Kong

Language

English

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    University of Limerick

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