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Moved by the Lightest Touch of Meaning: Even Minimal Significance Matters for Motivation From Childhood

Yilin Liu1,2; Fan Yang1

1 Department of Psychology, The University of Chicago · 2 School of Behavioral and Brain Sciences, the University of Texas at Dallas

Psychological Science 2026

How essential is a sense of significance for motivation—the feeling that our efforts matter beyond the trivial or momentary? Four studies ( N = 604, children aged 4–9 years of age and 582 adults) show that no amount of significance is too small to matter, even for small actions from early in life. Children and adults strongly preferred artistic activities with minimal significance (i.e., where their work would be saved) over activities with no lasting existence. This preference held for both repetitive and one-time tasks and was specific to creating artwork, not just observing it. Anticipating even minimal significance motivated participants to engage in productive rather than effortless activities. When significance is absent, focusing on enjoying the process partially, but not fully, compensates for motivation. These findings illuminate the scope and sensitivity of significance, revealing it to be not a luxury concern but an essential, early-emerging motivational force in an increasingly fast-paced, transient world.

DOI
10.1177/09567976261462874
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en
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