the act of making the decision left them with less willpower, as measured afterward in a test of how long they could squeeze a hand grip.
Again and again, the sugar restored willpower, but the artificial sweetener had no effect.
You can see a difference in grip strength following arduous decision making, and consuming glucose restores willpower?
I am aware that cognition is not magic, but I still find these results pretty amazing!
Less surprising perhaps is "Acute hypoglycemia impairs nonverbal intelligence: importance of avoiding ceiling effects in cognitive function testing."; PDF%20Diabetes%20Care%20raven%20alice%20heim%20hypoglycaemia.pdf)
A surprisingly good New York Times essay on willpower / ego depletion:
Do You Suffer From Decision Fatigue?
As it turns out, the essay is based on an upcoming Roy F. Baumeister book, "Willpower: Rediscovering the Greatest Human Strength", which will be available from Amazon in a couple of weeks (September 1, 2011) both as a hardcover and a Kindle edition.
Some quotes from the essay (italics and headings mine):
You spend the most willpower when you have to make AND implement your decisions:
Willpower depletion makes you reluctant to make trade-offs:
Willpower depletion makes you more likely to take the path of least resistance:
Testing willpower depletion in rural Indian villages:
Decision fatigue can be a factor in trapping people in poverty:
Glucose restores willpower in humans and dogs:
Ego depletion causes activity to rise in some parts of the brain and to decline in others:
Good decision makers structure their lives so as to conserve willpower: