The past decade has been witness to an unprecedented growth in research on
self-regulation. For example, of the 2,700-plus chapters, dissertations, and
journal articles containing the keyword ‘self-regulation’ archived in
PsychINFO, a well-used social science citation index, over 1,800 have been
published since 1990 alone. It is not entirely clear whether this trend is due
to a shift in the Zeitgeist or a change in semantics. Though we suspect that
both are involved, the Zeitgeist in Western, industrialized nations is the
likely driving force. The focus on the consumer, individual choice, and
populist movements that emphasize individual and community empowerment create a context congenial to self-regulation models. These models
represent efforts at maintaining a sense of individual autonomy in the face
of technological changes and monopolistic, corporate conglomerates that
are actually shrinking the individual’s options. Whereas the exact reason for
the proliferation of self-regulation models is not clear, what is clear is that
an increasing number of researchers and practitioners in the fields of health
and social science are adopting concepts and principles from self-regulation
theory to explain human behavior and promote behavior change in different
contexts (see Boekaerts et al. (2000) for a discussion of applications in areas
other than health).