The role of self-regulatory individual differences in counterfactual thinking
Abstract
The aim of this research was to investigate the role of self-regulatory individual
differences in counterfactual thinking. In particular, we examined individual
differences in autonomy, action/state orientation and cognitive self-affirmation
inclination over the course of seven experiments. Autonomy, which emphasizes
intrinsic motivation and reduced preoccupation with external outcomes, was
explored in Experiments 1, 2, and 3. The results showed that autonomy influenced
counterfactual controllability and that the method of eliciting counterfactual
responses was important to observe this association. Additionally, the experiments
demonstrated the adaptiveness of controllable counterfactuals in performance
improvement. Experiments 4 and 5 examined action/state orientation which is the
capacity to view self-representations as unthreatened following negative outcomes.
We found that an action-orientation was associated with counterfactual
controllability when participants encountered prolonged difficulty in a cognitive
task. Also, by experimentally manipulating action/state orientation we found that
innately action-oriented and state-oriented participants differed in the counterfactuals
they generated. Finally, Experiments 6 and 7 demonstrated that individuals high in
cognitive self-affirmation inclination, a tendency to self-affirm, generated more
controllable counterfactuals, compared to individuals without this tendency. The
findings from the seven experiments indicate that individual differences in selfregulatory
traits are important in the types of counterfactual thoughts that people
generate. We discuss the implications of the findings for the functional theory of
counterfactual thinking and for the use of counterfactual thought in applied settings.