Interesting question. People doing ketogenic diets tend to report a mental fog for the first two weeks. I'd like to see some of these studies repeated on ketogenic dieters who've stuck with it long enough to get past that initial fog. I wonder to what degree diets are inherently difficult to stick with, sense they both tax willpower and reduce the amount available.
Also, if I ever become a salesman, I'll make sure to do the reciprocity trick from Cialdini--but only bring diet sodas for the customer.
If I understand correctly, ketogenic diets tend to be easier to follow because you're less hungry. This squares up pretty well with my observations of my current high-fat diet.
I should chemically test whether or not I'm in ketosis though, I remember a haze, but I had assumed that it was the results of travelling, drinking, and barely sleeping (two days of bussing + ferry through the Balkans, drinking and staying up late at a wedding (and taking notes on the experience), then a sleep-free transatlantic flight before a car trip from Maryland to North Carolina...) Lots of confounding variables there.
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: