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Predicting Automaticity in Exercise Behaviour: The Role of Perceived Behavioural Control, Affect, Intention, Action Planning, and Behaviour
- Source :
- International Journal of Behavioral Medicine, 21(5), 767-774. Springer, Cham, International Journal of Behavioral Medicine, 21(5), 767-774. Routledge
- Publication Year :
- 2014
-
Abstract
- BackgroundHabit formation has been proposed as a way to maintain behaviour over time. PurposeRecent evidence suggests that constructs additional to repeated performance may predict physical automaticity, but no research has yet explored possible direct impacts of intention, planning, affect, and perceived behavioural control (PBC) on automaticity. MethodIn a prospective study over a 2-week period amongst 406 undergraduate students (M age=21.5 years [SD=2.59], 27.4 % males), we investigated main and interaction effects of past exercise behaviour, PBC, intention, planning, and affect on exercise automaticity. ResultsResults showed that — controlling for past behaviour — PBC, affect, and planning were significant and positive predictors of exercise automaticity. Decomposing a significant interaction between PBC and planning when to exercise re-vealed that planning became less predictive of exercise auto-maticity at higher levels of PBC. ConclusionFindings show that exercise automaticity is pre-dicted by repeated performance and social-cognitive constructs. Further, interactions between social-cognitive predictors may be different for behavioural automaticity than for behavioural frequency.
- Subjects :
- Adult
Male
Adolescent
media_common.quotation_subject
Health Behavior
Automaticity
Intention
Models, Psychological
Affect (psychology)
Automatism (medicine)
Time
Developmental psychology
Cohort Studies
Habits
Young Adult
Perceived behavioural control
PHYSICAL-ACTIVITY DOMAIN
Perception
STRENGTH
medicine
Humans
Prospective Studies
Young adult
Exercise
Applied Psychology
METAANALYSIS
media_common
SELF-EFFICACY
MOTIVATION
CONSUMPTION
Automatism
REPORT HABIT INDEX
digestive system diseases
Health psychology
Affect
Planning
Behavioral contrast
IMPLEMENTATION INTENTIONS
Female
Habit
PAST BEHAVIOR
medicine.symptom
Psychology
INTERVENTION
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 10705503
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- International Journal of Behavioral Medicine, 21(5), 767-774. Springer, Cham, International Journal of Behavioral Medicine, 21(5), 767-774. Routledge
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....92bce935391da2d9b51b7e90a16f095a