Hehe, “the mechanism” was referring to the entire procrastination process, not one specific theory or cause. Could my communication be improved somehow, or is some confusion somewhat unavoidable?
The definition of procrastination in psychology is, “procrastination refers to the act of replacing more urgent actions with tasks less urgent, or doing something from which one derives enjoyment, and thus putting off impending tasks to a later time.” It appears like procrastination is motivated by bad feelings about urgent tasks or good feelings about less important tasks.
However, anchoring relates more to making judgements based off a value provided first. There is no emotion involved. Normally people do not think “it looks like the deadline is 2 weeks away, when should I do it?” Instead, they put it off because of an emotional reason, like they have an urge to play video games, or the task is painful to think about.
Since anchoring does not cause the feeling or urges that drive people to procrastinate, I don’t think it has an impact on doing tasks sooner or later.
I don’t know. Just retread your posts a couple minutes later maybe? I just feels frustrating to make sense of them sometimes. So maybe with some time to forget what you meant, you’ll be able to read your post like somebody else, and feel the frustration they feel, and remedy it?
I’m sorry if nobody else has trouble with your posts and it’s just that I have some sort of problem understanding you.
Anyway… It sounds like you distinguish between two different reasons people start later than optimal:
Bad planning that causes us to intend to start later than optimal
Emotional factors that cause us to start later than intended
I agree that reason 2 is more properly called procrastination than reason 1, and that anchoring-induced delays, if they exist at all, would be part of reason 1.
So, yeah, if anything, anchoring on a deadline causes irrational delay, not really procrastination.
Hehe, “the mechanism” was referring to the entire procrastination process, not one specific theory or cause. Could my communication be improved somehow, or is some confusion somewhat unavoidable?
The definition of procrastination in psychology is, “procrastination refers to the act of replacing more urgent actions with tasks less urgent, or doing something from which one derives enjoyment, and thus putting off impending tasks to a later time.” It appears like procrastination is motivated by bad feelings about urgent tasks or good feelings about less important tasks.
However, anchoring relates more to making judgements based off a value provided first. There is no emotion involved. Normally people do not think “it looks like the deadline is 2 weeks away, when should I do it?” Instead, they put it off because of an emotional reason, like they have an urge to play video games, or the task is painful to think about.
Since anchoring does not cause the feeling or urges that drive people to procrastinate, I don’t think it has an impact on doing tasks sooner or later.
I don’t know. Just retread your posts a couple minutes later maybe? I just feels frustrating to make sense of them sometimes. So maybe with some time to forget what you meant, you’ll be able to read your post like somebody else, and feel the frustration they feel, and remedy it?
I’m sorry if nobody else has trouble with your posts and it’s just that I have some sort of problem understanding you.
Anyway… It sounds like you distinguish between two different reasons people start later than optimal:
Bad planning that causes us to intend to start later than optimal
Emotional factors that cause us to start later than intended
I agree that reason 2 is more properly called procrastination than reason 1, and that anchoring-induced delays, if they exist at all, would be part of reason 1.
So, yeah, if anything, anchoring on a deadline causes irrational delay, not really procrastination.