The Psychological Origins of Procrastination and How to Stop Putting Things Off

in #psychology8 years ago

We’ve all had the experience of wanting to get a project done but  putting it off for later. Sometimes we wait because we just don’t care  enough about the project, but other times we care a lot–and still end up  doing something else. I, for one, end up cleaning my house when I have a  lot of papers to grade, even though I know I need to grade them.

This post originally appeared on The Conversation.

So why do we procrastinate? Are we built to operate this way at some  times? Or is there something wrong with the way we’re approaching work?

These questions are central to my research on goal pursuit, which could offer some clues from neuroscience about why we procrastinate–and how to overcome this tendency.

To Do, or Not to Do

It all starts with a simple choice between working now on a given  project and doing anything else: working on a different project, doing  something fun or doing nothing at all.

The decision to work on something is driven by how much we value  accomplishing the project in that moment–what psychologists call its  subjective value. And procrastination, in psychological terms, is what  happens when the value of doing something else outweighs the value of  working now.

This way of thinking suggests a simple trick to defeat  procrastination: find a way to boost the subjective value of working  now, relative to the value of other things. You could increase the value  of the project, decrease the value of the distraction, or some  combination of the two.

For example, instead of cleaning my house, I might try to focus on  why grading is personally important to me. Or I could think about how  unpleasant cleaning can actually be–especially when sharing a house with  a toddler.

It’s simple advice, but adhering to this strategy can be quite  difficult, mainly because there are so many forces that diminish the  value of working in the present.

The Distant Deadline 

People are not entirely rational in the way they value things. For  example, a dollar bill is worth exactly the same today as it is a week  from now, but its subjective value–roughly how good it would feel to own  a dollar–depends on other factors besides its face value, such as when  we receive it.

The tendency for people to devalue money and other goods based on time is called delay discounting. For example, one study  showed that, on average, receiving $100 three months from now is worth  the same to people as receiving $83 right now. People would rather lose  $17 than wait a few months to get a larger reward.

Other factors also influence subjective value, such as how much money someone has recently gained or lost. The key point is that there is not a perfect match between objective value and subjective value.

Delay discounting is a factor in procrastination because the  completion of the project happens in the future. Getting something done  is a delayed reward, so its value in the present is reduced: the further  away the deadline is, the less attractive it seems to work on the  project right now.

Studies have repeatedly shown  that the tendency to procrastinate closely follows economic models of  delay discounting. Furthermore, people who characterize themselves as  procrastinators show an exaggerated effect. They discount the value of getting something done ahead of time even more than other people.

One way to increase the value of completing a task is to make the finish line seem closer. For example, vividly imagining a future reward reduces delay discounting.

No Work Is ‘Effortless’

Not only can completing a project be devalued because it happens in  the future, but working on a project can also be unattractive due to the  simple fact that work takes effort.

New research supports the idea that mental effort is intrinsically costly; for this reason, people generally choose to work on an easier task rather than a harder task. Furthermore, there are greater subjective costs for work that feels harder (though these costs can be offset by experience with the task at hand).

This leads to the interesting prediction that people would  procrastinate more the harder they expect the work to be. That’s because  the more effort a task requires, the more someone stands to gain by  putting the same amount of effort into something else (a phenomenon  economists call opportunity costs). Opportunity costs make working on something that seems hard feels like a loss.

Sure enough, a group of studies  shows that people procrastinate more on unpleasant tasks. These results  suggest that reducing the pain of working on a project, for example by breaking it down into more familiar and manageable pieces, would be an effective way to reduce procrastination.

Your Work, Your Identity

When we write that procrastination is a side effect of the way we  value things, it frames task completion as a product of motivation,  rather than ability.

In other words, you can be really good at something, whether it’s  cooking a gourmet meal or writing a story, but if you don’t possess the  motivation, or sense of importance, to complete the task, it’ll likely  be put off.

It was for this reason that the writer Robert Hanks, in a recent essay for the London Review of Books, described procrastination as “a failure of appetites.”

The source of this “appetite” can be a bit tricky. But one could  argue that, like our (real) appetite for food, it’s something that’s  closely intertwined with our daily lives, our culture and our sense of  who we are.

So how does one increase the subjective value of a project? A powerful way–one that my graduate students and I have written about in detail–is  to connect the project to your self-concept. Our hypothesis is that  projects seen as important to a person’s self-concept will hold more  subjective value for that person.

It’s for this reason that Hanks also wrote that procrastination seems  to stem from a failure to “identify sufficiently with your future  self”–in other words, the self for whom the goal is most relevant.

Because people are motivated to maintain a positive self-concept, goals connected closely to one’s sense of self or identity take on much more value.

Connecting the project to more immediate sources of value, such as  life goals or core values, can fill the deficit in subjective value that  underlies procrastination.

Elliot Berkman is an Associate Professor of Psychology, University of Oregon. Jordan Miller-Ziegler is a PhD Candidate in Psychology, University of Oregon.

MY OFFICIAL WEBSITE :http://lifehacker.com/the-psychological-origins-of-procrastination-and-how-to-1786630455

Update 4 hour ago.

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Some nice points raised, some that resonated with me on a personal level. However I feel one important, and extremely common reason for procrastination wasn't mentioned - the fear of failure. Myself and many colleagues have discussed this at length and it appears to be a common trait, especially on projects important to us.

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