We are pleased to announce the winners of our grant competition:
2015-2016 Philosophy of Self-Control Grant Winners
Self-control, vigilance, and unintentional omissions
- Robert Audi, Manuel Vargas, and Samuel Murray
Shaping our mental lives: On the possibility and value of mental self-control and mental self-regulation
- Dorothea Debus
Children, self-control, and responsible agency
- Meghan Griffith
The guilty brain: Self-control as executive function
- William Hirstein, Katrina Sifferd, and Tyler Fagan
The subjective authority of intentions: Self-control in planning agents
- Lilian O’Brien
Theories of self-control and the role of attention
- Adina Roskies
The role of emotions in self-control
- Andrea Scarantino
2015-2017 Integrated Science & Philosophy of Self-Control Grant Winners
Moral virtue and self-control
- Roy F. Baumeister and Richard Holton
Efficient intentions: How control-beliefs shape self-control
- Marcel Brass, Davide Rigoni, and Mario De Caro
Self-control and cooperation: Evolutionary, developmental and cross-cultural perspective
- Yarrow Dunham, David Rand, Eric Mandelbaum, Katie McAuliffe
Epistemic improvement and the dynamics of bias: The role of belief in one’s introspective capabilities in guiding exposure control and strategic ignorance
- James Friedrich and Sammy Basu
Integrated wholes versus fragmented parts: How construal level affects perceptions of the ‘real me’ and agency in self-control
- Kentaro Fujita, Timothy Schroeder, Yaacov Trope
Self-control and conceptions of free will, desire and normative constraint: A cross-cultural developmental investigation
- Alison Gopnik, John Campbell, and Tamar Kushnir
Applying moral pluralism to the study of self-control
- Jesse Graham, John Doris, John Monterosso, Daphna Oyserman, Morteza Dehghani, Peter Meindl
Attentional control and self-control
- Glyn Humphreys, Julian Savulescu, Jeanette Kennett, Neil Levy, Joshua Shepherd
Complementary benefits of first- and third-person perspectives for self-control
- E.J. Masicampo, Kathleen Vohs, Shaun Nichols
Using connectomic imaging to investigate a (reformulated) muscle model of self-control
- Chandra Sripada and John Jonides
Temptation and the self: Acceptance versus alienation as influencing self-control
- Jennifer Veilleux and Eric Funkhouser