What the hell was I thinking?

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What the hell was I What the hell was I thinking? thinking? Understanding the precursors to real-life Understanding the precursors to real-life regret regret Andy Towers, Ross Flett, & Andy Towers, Ross Flett, & Stephen Hill Stephen Hill School of Psychology School of Psychology Massey University Massey University

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Andy Towers - What the hell was I thinking?

Transcript of What the hell was I thinking?

Page 1: What the hell was I thinking?

What the hell was I thinking?What the hell was I thinking? Understanding the precursors to real-life regretUnderstanding the precursors to real-life regret

Andy Towers, Ross Flett, & Stephen Andy Towers, Ross Flett, & Stephen HillHill

School of PsychologySchool of PsychologyMassey UniversityMassey University

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A History of RegretA History of Regret

Regret is VERY common

What signals regret?• Turned out worse than it could have• We were responsible for the decision• Involved something we care about

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What do we regret?What do we regret?

Educational choices are our greatest regret*

*Roese, N. J., & Summerville, A. (2005). Personality & Social Psychology Bulletin, 31, 1273-1285.

Pro

port

ion o

f re

gre

ts

(%)

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Past theories of regretPast theories of regret

Temporal Pattern to Life Regret• Short-term: We regret actions more than inactions• Long-term: We regret inactions more than actions

Differences in Life Domains• High opportunity to change (e.g., education) = high regret• Low opportunity to change (e.g., family) = low regret

But…• Where is the humanity?• Where is the intensity?

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Pathway to a new theoryPathway to a new theory

Everyday decision-making• Implicit - Fast and requires little cognitive effort (e.g., heuristics)• Explicit - Slow and requires a lot of cognitive effort (e.g.,

analysis)

A dual processes approach1. Implicit orientation

• Semi-hard-wired responses (e.g., driving)• Based on situational consistency

2. Justification• Recognised as important• Underdeveloped – what about levels of justification?

Basis?

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The Dual Process Theory of RegretThe Dual Process Theory of Regret

Strong justificatio

n

Weak justificatio

n

No justificatio

n

Decision Implicit Process Explicit Process Level of Regret

Regrettable decision

Feels ‘Wrong’

Feels ‘Right’

Strong justificatio

n

Weak justificatio

n

No justificatio

n

HIGHEST

LOWEST

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MethodMethod

Participants• 653 respondents (23% response rate)• Aged 18-87 (mean = 48)• Mainly NZ European (82%)• Broad range of educational levels & work status

Postal Survey• Greatest single short and long-term regret• Regret intensity• Whether regret contradicted personal life rules (i.e., self-

consistency)• How the decision was justified (i.e., strong, weak or none)

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Results: Life domainResults: Life domain

Short-term regrets• No difference in intensity

Pro

port

ion o

f re

gre

ts

(%)

Long-term regrets• No difference in

intensity

Pro

port

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f re

gre

ts

(%)

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Results: Action vs. inactionResults: Action vs. inaction

Conclusion: • Theory of Life Domains does not work• The Temporal Theory of Regret does not

work

Intensity• Actions more intense

in long-term

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Short-Term Regret Long-Term Regret

ActionInaction

Regre

t In

ten

sity

(1-9

)

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DPTR: Short-term regretsDPTR: Short-term regrets

Regret across DPTR groups

3

4

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Group1

Group2

Group3

Group4

Group5

Group6

Regre

t In

ten

sity

(1-

9)

What influences short-term regret intensity?

Implicit Orientation (unconscious feeling)

Decision Justification (conscious thought)

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DPTR: Long-term regretsDPTR: Long-term regrets

Regret across DPTR groups

3

4

5

6

7

Group1

Group2

Group3

Group4

Group5

Group6

Regre

t In

ten

sity

(1-9

)

What influences long-term regret intensity?

Implicit Orientation (unconscious feeling)

Decision Justification (conscious thought)

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What influences the intensity of What influences the intensity of regret?regret?

Our feelings of right and wrong• Central to short and long-term regret• If it feels wrong then don’t do it!

An explicit justification• Only influences long-term regret

intensity

Previous theories • Do not work