Abstract
This study examined the relationship between academic procrastination and bedtime and the indirect and moderating effects of sensation seeking and goal disengagement on that relationship. One hundred and ninety-nine Chinese undergraduate students (mean age = 19.30 years, SD = 1.11) completed a packet of questionnaires that assessed academic procrastination, bedtime, sensation seeking, and goal disengagement. Regression analyses indicated that there was a positive relation between academic procrastination and bedtime; however, the relation was stronger for those students with higher levels of goal disengagement than for those students with lower levels of goal disengagement. In addition, path analyses indicated that sensation seeking had an indirect effect on bedtime through academic procrastination. Implications for future research of the current study were discussed.
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