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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
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Beyond dopamine: The noradrenergic system and mental effort
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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