Abstract :
Drawing from theories regarding the role of
awareness in behavioral self-regulation, this research was
designed to examine the role of mindfulness as a moderator
between implicit motivation and the motivation for day-today
behavior. We hypothesized that dispositional mindfulness
(Brown and Ryan, J Pers Soc Psychol, 84, 822–848,
2003) would act to modify the expression of implicit
autonomy orientation in daily behavioral motivation. Using
the Implicit Association Test (Greenwald et al. J Pers Soc
Psychol, 74, 1464–1480, 1998), Study 1 provided evidence
for the reliability and validity of a new measure of implicit
autonomy orientation. Using an experience-sampling
strategy, Study 2 showed the hypothesized moderating
effect, such that implicit autonomy orientation predicted
day-to-day motivation only for those lower in dispositional
mindfulness. Those higher in mindfulness showed more
autonomously motivated behavior regardless of implicit
orientation toward autonomy or heteronomy. It also
showed that this moderating effect of awareness was specific
to mindfulness and was primarily manifest in
spontaneous behavior. Discussion focuses on the implications
of these findings for dual process theory and research