“…Although researchers have struggled to formulate a single definition of self‐control and impulsivity, researchers generally agree that self‐control is dedicated to maximizing the long‐term best interests of the individual (Barkley, ; Kanfer & Karoly, ; Mischel, ), whereas impulsivity often interferes the attainment of long‐term goals by driving people to act on impulse (Barratt, ; Hofmann, Friese, & Wiers, ; Moeller, Barratt, Dougherty, Schmitz, & Swann, ). In practice, researchers on procrastination have been dedicated to linking procrastination with self‐control or impulsivity by collecting evidence from a wide variety of related measures, including questionnaires (Gustavson, Miyake, Hewitt, & Friedman, ; P. Liu & Feng, ; Y. Wu, Li, et al, ), intertemporal choice (Tice & Baumeister, ; H. Wu, Gui, et al, ) and response inhibition (Rebetez, Rochat, Barsics, & Van der Linden, ). Although these studies can provide strong evidence of the relationship between procrastination and self‐control or impulsivity, they do little to further our understanding of the underlying mechanisms of these links (Duckworth & Kern, ).…”