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Michael Inzlicht

  • Home
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Articles and Chapters


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Viewing entries tagged
reward

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An experimental manipulation of the value of effort [PDF]

June 18, 2024

Lin, H., Westbrook, A., Fan, F., & Inzlicht, M. (2024). Nature Human Behaviour, 8, 988-1000.

Tags: effort, learned industriousness, registered report, reward

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The average reward rate modulates behavioral and neural indices of effortful control allocation [PDF]

March 3, 2022

Lin, H., Ristic, J., Inzlicht, M., & Otto, A.R. (2022). Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 34, 2113-2126.

Tags: EEG, cognitive control, effort, midfrontal theta, reward

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Expectations of reward and efficacy guide cognitive control allocation [PDF]

April 30, 2020

Frömer, R., Lin, H., Dean Wolf, C.K., Inzlicht, M., & Shenhav, A. (2021). Nature Communications, 12, 1230.

*Download Open Data, Open Materials, Preregistrations

Tags: effort, self-efficacy, reward, anterior cingulate cortex, neuroscience

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Electrophysiological indices of anterior cingulate cortex function reveal changing levels of cognitive effort and reward valuation that sustain task performance [PDF]

December 30, 2018

Umemoto, A., Inzlicht, M., & Holroyd, C.B. (2019). Neuropsychologia, 123, 67-76.

* Download Open Data and Materials

Tags: anterior cingulate cortex, reward, fatigue, Reward Positivity, effort

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News

Featured
The AI Empathy Paradox: Customers Reject The Help They Say They Prefer

When researchers asked people whether they’d rather get an empathetic response from a human or from AI, human responses won by a wide margin. When the same researchers actually showed them the responses, AI won by a wider one. People who said they preferred human responses rated the AI replies as more empathetic, more validating, and even better at making them feel heard.

The most recent evidence comes from a Penn State and University of Toronto team led by Joshua Wenger, published in January in Communications Psychology. Across four studies, participants were given the choice between receiving an empathetic response from a human or from ChatGPT. They picked humans 57% to 62% of the time.

Read More

Mental health awareness campaigns can have unintended consequences

A 10-year-old girl watches YouTube with a friend during their after-school program. An ad pops up. A two-minute quiz can tell her if she has ADHD. She takes it, of course. And just like that, she comes home to talk to her child psychiatrist dad about how she has ADHD.

This story is not unique. Mental health awareness has become one of Canada’s most visible public health projects. The messaging is everywhere: Bell Let’s Talk, school wellness e-mails, workplace campaigns, social media initiatives.

Yet despite these efforts, population-level mental health keeps declining. Medication use is increasing. How can this be?

Read More

Higher Learning at Happy Hour

Professor Michael Inzlicht is featured in a recent Toronto Star article about Toronto’s growing “edutainment” scene. 

The article says that there is a growing appetite for bringing lectures into local bars, where young professionals gather to learn, connect, and share ideas over food and drinks. Events like Brains & Barstools blend casual socializing with talks from experts on topics ranging from AI empathy to literature and politics. With weekly sellouts, these gatherings highlight a rising interest for community, curiosity, and meaningful conversation.

Asked why he was interested in participating in the event, Professor Inzlicht is quoted as saying: "I like beer, and I like talking to people." Adding: "I suspect there were fewer people here on their phones than in a typical lecture of mine."

Read More Here

Collaborators

  • Joshua Aronson, New York University
  • Avi Ben-Zeev, San Francisco State University
  • Elliot Berkman, University of Oregon
  • Kirk Brown, Virginia Commonwealth University
  • Daryl Cameron, Penn State University
  • Belle Derks, Utrecht University
  • Jennifer Gutsell, Brandeis University
  • Greg Hajcak, Florida State University
  • Eddie Harmon-Jones, University of New South Wales
  • Jacob Hirsh, University of Toronto
  • Cendri Hutcherson, University of Toronto
  • Sonia Kang, University of Toronto
  • Michael Larson, Brigham Young University
  • Lisa Legault, Clarkson University
  • Ian McGregor, University of Waterloo
  • Marina Milyavskaya, Carleton University
  • Sukhvinder Obhi, McMaster University
  • Liz Page-Gould, University of Toronto
  • Travis Proulx, Cardiff University
  • Blair Saunders, University of Dundee
  • Brandon Schmeichel, Texas A&M University
  • Zindel Segal, University of Toronto
  • Alexa Tullett, University of Alabama

University of Toronto

  • Department of Psychology Scarborough
  • Department of Psychology St. George
  • Social Personality Research Group
  • University of Toronto
  • University of Toronto Library

Organizations

  • Association for Psychological Science
  • Canadian Psychological Association
  • Canada Foundation for Innovation
  • International Social Cognition Network
  • International Society for Research on Emotion
  • National Academy of Education
  • Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  • Social and Affective Neuroscience Society
  • Social Psychology Network
  • Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council
  • Society for Personality and Social Psychology
  • Society for Psychophysiological Research
  • Spencer Foundation

Research Applications

  • Calculating Confidence Intervals
  • Effect Size Calculator
  • Meta Analysis Calculator
  • P-checker
  • P-curve
 
 
 
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Image Credits

  • Brain Icon by Anisha Varghese at the Noun Project
  • Header image by Michael Häusser
  • About image by aLansong!
  • Header image by ZEISS Microscopy
  • Map of Toronto by StamenDesign PrettyMaps
  • © 2014 - Michael Inzlicht
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