%0 Journal Article %T The Solitude of Secrecy: Thinking About Secrets Evokes Goal Conflict and Feelings of Fatigue %A Adam D. Galinsky %A Michael L. Slepian %A Nir Halevy %J Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin %@ 1552-7433 %D 2019 %R 10.1177/0146167218810770 %X Past research has conceptualized secrecy as speech inhibition during social interaction. In contrast, the current research broadens the understanding of secrecy by conceptualizing it as the commitment to conceal information. Seven experiments demonstrate the implications of this broader conceptualization for understanding secrecy¡¯s consequences. The results demonstrate that thinking about secrets¡ªrelative to thinking about personal information unknown by others that is not purposefully concealed (i.e., undisclosed information)¡ªindirectly increases the experience of fatigue by evoking feelings of isolation and a motivational conflict with one¡¯s affiliation goals. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the fatiguing effects of secrecy have consequences for task persistence and performance. Integrating theories of motivation, fatigue, and social isolation, we offer new directions for research on secrecy %K secrecy %K social isolation %K fatigue %K motivational conflict %K task persistence %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0146167218810770