Crossref Citations
This article has been cited by the following publications. This list is generated based on data provided by Crossref.
Kool, Wouter
McGuire, Joseph T.
Wang, Gary J.
Botvinick, Matthew M.
and
Brosnan, Sarah Frances
2013.
Neural and Behavioral Evidence for an Intrinsic Cost of Self-Control.
PLoS ONE,
Vol. 8,
Issue. 8,
p.
e72626.
Daw, Nathaniel D.
and
Dayan, Peter
2014.
The algorithmic anatomy of model-based evaluation.
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences,
Vol. 369,
Issue. 1655,
p.
20130478.
Goldfarb, Liat
and
Henik, Avishai
2014.
Is the brain a resource-cheapskate?.
Frontiers in Human Neuroscience,
Vol. 8,
Issue. ,
Park, Jisook
Hill, W. Trey
and
Bonds-Raacke, Jennifer
2015.
Exploring the relationship between cognitive effort exertion and regret in online vs. offline shopping.
Computers in Human Behavior,
Vol. 49,
Issue. ,
p.
444.
Seli, Paul
Risko, Evan F.
Smilek, Daniel
and
Schacter, Daniel L.
2016.
Mind-Wandering With and Without Intention.
Trends in Cognitive Sciences,
Vol. 20,
Issue. 8,
p.
605.
Kurzban, Robert
2016.
The sense of effort.
Current Opinion in Psychology,
Vol. 7,
Issue. ,
p.
67.
Schwartenbeck, Philipp
FitzGerald, Thomas H.B.
and
Dolan, Ray
2016.
Neural signals encoding shifts in beliefs.
NeuroImage,
Vol. 125,
Issue. ,
p.
578.
Cools, Roshan
2016.
The costs and benefits of brain dopamine for cognitive control.
WIREs Cognitive Science,
Vol. 7,
Issue. 5,
p.
317.
Mosner, Maya G.
Kinard, Jessica L.
McWeeny, Sean
Shah, Jasmine S.
Markiewitz, Nathan D.
Damiano-Goodwin, Cara R.
Burchinal, Margaret R.
Rutherford, Helena J. V.
Greene, Rachel K.
Treadway, Michael T.
and
Dichter, Gabriel S.
2017.
Vicarious Effort-Based Decision-Making in Autism Spectrum Disorders.
Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders,
Vol. 47,
Issue. 10,
p.
2992.
Maran, Thomas
Sachse, Pierre
Martini, Markus
and
Furtner, Marco
2017.
Benefits of a hungry mind: When hungry, exposure to food facilitates proactive interference resolution.
Appetite,
Vol. 108,
Issue. ,
p.
343.
Dobryakova, Ekaterina
Jessup, Ryan K.
and
Tricomi, Elizabeth
2017.
Modulation of ventral striatal activity by cognitive effort.
NeuroImage,
Vol. 147,
Issue. ,
p.
330.
Dunn, Timothy L.
Koehler, Derek J.
and
Risko, Evan F.
2017.
Evaluating Effort: Influences of Evaluation Mode on Judgments of Task‐specific Efforts.
Journal of Behavioral Decision Making,
Vol. 30,
Issue. 4,
p.
869.
Bossaerts, Peter
and
Murawski, Carsten
2017.
Computational Complexity and Human Decision-Making.
Trends in Cognitive Sciences,
Vol. 21,
Issue. 12,
p.
917.
Kool, Wouter
and
Botvinick, Matthew
2018.
Mental labour.
Nature Human Behaviour,
Vol. 2,
Issue. 12,
p.
899.
Hsu, Chia-Fen
Propp, Lee
Panetta, Larissa
Martin, Shane
Dentakos, Stella
Toplak, Maggie E.
Eastwood, John D.
and
Puebla, Iratxe
2018.
Mental effort and discomfort: Testing the peak-end effect during a cognitively demanding task.
PLOS ONE,
Vol. 13,
Issue. 2,
p.
e0191479.
Silvetti, Massimo
Vassena, Eliana
Abrahamse, Elger
Verguts, Tom
and
O'Reilly, Jill
2018.
Dorsal anterior cingulate-brainstem ensemble as a reinforcement meta-learner.
PLOS Computational Biology,
Vol. 14,
Issue. 8,
p.
e1006370.
Mrazek, Alissa J.
Ihm, Elliott D.
Molden, Daniel C.
Mrazek, Michael D.
Zedelius, Claire M.
and
Schooler, Jonathan W.
2018.
Expanding minds: Growth mindsets of self-regulation and the influences on effort and perseverance.
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology,
Vol. 79,
Issue. ,
p.
164.
Stock, Ann-Kathrin
Colzato, Lorenza
and
Beste, Christian
2018.
On the effects of tyrosine supplementation on interference control in a randomized, double-blind placebo-control trial.
European Neuropsychopharmacology,
Vol. 28,
Issue. 8,
p.
933.
Lieder, Falk
Shenhav, Amitai
Musslick, Sebastian
Griffiths, Thomas L.
and
Gershman, Samuel J.
2018.
Rational metareasoning and the plasticity of cognitive control.
PLOS Computational Biology,
Vol. 14,
Issue. 4,
p.
e1006043.
Yee, Debbie M
and
Braver, Todd S
2018.
Interactions of motivation and cognitive control.
Current Opinion in Behavioral Sciences,
Vol. 19,
Issue. ,
p.
83.
Target article
An opportunity cost model of subjective effort and task performance
Related commentaries (30)
An addition to Kurzban et al.'s model: Thoroughness of cost-benefit analyses depends on the executive tasks at hand
An expanded perspective on the role of effort phenomenology in motivation and performance
An interoceptive neuroanatomical perspective on feelings, energy, and effort
Beyond dopamine: The noradrenergic system and mental effort
Beyond simple utility in predicting self-control fatigue: A proximate alternative to the opportunity cost model
Can tasks be inherently boring?
Competing goals draw attention to effort, which then enters cost-benefit computations as input
Depletable resources: Necessary, in need of fair treatment, and multi-functional
Difficulty matters: Unspecific attentional demands as a major determinant of performance highlighted by clinical studies
Effort aversiveness may be functional, but does it reflect opportunity cost?
Effort processes in achieving performance outcomes: Interrelations among and roles of core constructs
Formal models of “resource depletion”
Give me strength or give me a reason: Self-control, religion, and the currency of reputation
Is ego depletion too incredible? Evidence for the overestimation of the depletion effect
Local resource depletion hypothesis as a mechanism for action selection in the brain
Maximising utility does not promote survival
Mental effort and fatigue as consequences of monotony
Monotonous tasks require self-control because they interfere with endogenous reward
On treating effort as a dynamically varying cost input
Opportunity cost calculations only determine justified effort – Or, What happened to the resource conservation principle?
Opportunity prioritization, biofunctional simultaneity, and psychological mutual exclusion
Persistence: What does research on self-regulation and delay of gratification have to say?
Persisting through subjective effort: A key role for the anterior cingulate cortex?
Subjective effort derives from a neurological monitor of performance costs and physiological resources
The costs of giving up: Action versus inaction asymmetries in regret
The economics of cognitive effort
The intrinsic cost of cognitive control
The opportunity cost model: Automaticity, individual differences, and self-control resources
Theories of anterior cingulate cortex function: Opportunity cost
Willpower is not synonymous with “executive function”
Author response
Cost-benefit models as the next, best option for understanding subjective effort