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Psychology 415; Social Basis of Health Behavior Attitudes & self-regulation 1 Opening Issue: if health behavior is related to some stable attribute of the person, what is that? How is it changed? “Personality”: stable (unlearned?) trait “Attitude”: Learned evaluative response Attitudes: Core evaluation of an object [Context dependent] Behavioral disposition Attitude theory core issue: Attitude behavior consistency Beliefs v. affect? Conflicting beliefs? Habit? Self-efficacy?
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Psychology 415; Social Basis of Health Behavior Attitudes & self-regulation 2 Core constituents: Attitude Models Knowledge Information re: health practices Awareness of health related stimuli ► “Cues to action” Attitudes and Beliefs Preferences or evaluations: e.g., consumer preferences. Beliefs, ► Perceived vulnerability, ► Outcome expectancies Affect, e.g., depression / anxiety & information seeking ► “Affect as information” models Behavior Behavioral history; ► habit formation Behavioral intentions; context & behavior -specific cognitive “set”
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Psychology 415; Social Basis of Health Behavior Attitudes & self-regulation 3 Some basic attitude elements Context dependence Potentially multiple attitudes Context dependency attitude – behavior inconsistency Accessibility & strength priming effects speed of recall Ambivalence cognition v. affect Approach avoidance Anchoring effects Value congruence “Instrumental” attitudes; functional in predicting outcomes of behavior, modifiable via information or direct experience... “Value expressive”; expression of basic ideology or principles...less responsive to experience or information.
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Psychology 415; Social Basis of Health Behavior Attitudes & self-regulation 4 Basic attitude elements, 2 Primacy of affect & evaluation Affect >> cognition when they are in conflict Congruent affect & cognition strong / change resistant attitude Affective / evaluative Rx precedes cognitive processing Affective priming independent of cognitive processes sleeper effect? Expectancy x value: core underpinning of attitude models Attitude = [belief 1 x value 1 ] + [belief 2 x value 2 ] + … Key variables: # & nature of key beliefs, direction & strength of valuation (affective response).
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Psychology 415; Social Basis of Health Behavior Attitudes & self-regulation 5 Basic attitude elements, 3 Cognitive accessibility of beliefs Cs goals and motivations accessibility Arousal & accessibility (Oxytocin & sexual stimuli) Positive goal features accessible for long-term decisions Negative goal features accessible for short term decisions Key approach avoidance conflict: Long-term self-regulation (approach health goal) more effortful & cognitive demanding Short-term affective coping (avoidance) less effortful. Key approach avoidance conflict: Long-term self-regulation (approach health goal) more effortful & cognitive demanding Short-term affective coping (avoidance) less effortful. Attentional “narrowing” and lessening accessibility Alcohol / drug effects Cognitive avoidance
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Psychology 415; Social Basis of Health Behavior Attitudes & self-regulation 6 Attitude change/formation/Persuasion Consistency theories dissonance theory value -- attitude congruence consistency & attraction averaging models (v. “tipping point” perspective) Exposure / conditioning Simple repetition, pairing of attitude with existing positive response. Heritability Happiness set point? Affectivity? Other set points; substance use, temperament, food. Tolerance for ambiguity? Heuristic - systematic models of persuasion Motivated; argument strength predicts (strong & enduring) attitude change Non-motivated: peripheral / heuristic elements predict less strong / enduring change
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Psychology 415; Social Basis of Health Behavior Attitudes & self-regulation 7 Attitude change Receiver characteristics “Involvement” --> greater motivation... Personal relevance Defending pre-existing attitude Express values Intermediate levels of self-esteem --> change Mood Source characteristics Message clarity x source credibility (interaction with ‘motivation’) In group v. out group
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Psychology 415; Social Basis of Health Behavior Attitudes & self-regulation 8 Attitude change, 2 Message characteristics Fear arousal: Rogers’ protection motivation theory Basic message x receiver effects: Seriousness of message; personal susceptibility; outcome expectancies; efficacy expectancies Framing; Context effects Gain v. loss & reflection effect
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Psychology 415; Social Basis of Health Behavior Attitudes & self-regulation 9 Basic models Triandis [belief x affect] + belief 2 x affect 2 ].... = behavioral disposition Fishbein [belief x value] + [belief 2 x value 2 ].... [norm x value] + [norm 2 x value 2 ].... Ajzen; theory of Planned Behavior Behavioral intention Behavioral disposition Habit Self efficacy
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Psychology 415; Social Basis of Health Behavior Attitudes & self-regulation 10 Psychosocial challenges for health behavior: Informational / Cognitive Complexity and non-stability of health related information “Press conference” science Food industry influence on HHS information “Food pyramid” complexity Credibility of multiple information sources The WEB and informational tunneling Powerful cognitive message effects Framing: (in)congruence with approach / avoidant attitudes Gain / loss: gain framing >> loss framing. Cognitive salience of competing messages Powerful anchoring effects of even trivial information Social norms “Fat” norms Culturally – specific norms; e.g., Gay community & drug use.
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Psychology 415; Social Basis of Health Behavior Attitudes & self-regulation 11 Psychosocial challenges for health behavior: Affective “Hot” information and cognitive or behavioral avoidance Cf: Miller C-SHIP model HIV testing data, cancer screening, etc. Cognitive avoidance in chronic disease Self-efficacy: Fear of difficulty of behavioral change “Demotivating” effects of negative mood “Strategic” use of negative health behavior to enhance mood enhancing “Denial” of health threat via group membership Outgroup stereotypes and perceived non-vulnerability Peer & cultural conformity pressure toward (or ‘not against’) health threats
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Psychology 415; Social Basis of Health Behavior Attitudes & self-regulation 12 Psychosocial challenges for health behavior: Behavioral Difficulty of delaying gratification, decreasing “stimulus boundedness” “Automaticity”, cognitive capacity, and real limitations on cognitive control over behavior Self-monitoring and self-regulation needed to process and follow health information “Self-regulation capacity” models 7 +2 informational capacity Real difficulty of health alternatives “Food deserts” Violent neighborhoods / build environment & exercise availability American industrial food system Outcome & efficacy expectancies
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Psychology 415; Social Basis of Health Behavior Attitudes & self-regulation 13 Self-Regulation Core elements: 1. Goal setting 2. Self-evaluative reactions 3. Self-efficacy for goal-related behavioral performance
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Psychology 415; Social Basis of Health Behavior Attitudes & self-regulation 14 Self-regulation elements: 1. Goal setting Stable “action schema” or “script” Abelson: “automatic” behavioral scripts Higgins: discrepancies between “actual”, “ideal” & “ought” selves Modest ideal actual: intrinsic motivation for goals Modest ought actual: extrinsic motivation for goals Strong ideal actual: guilt, anxiety Strong ought actual: depression, helplessness Goals as preferences: Ajzen attitude models Goals and Action Identification Higher-order identification: generalized values Lower-order ID: concrete behaviors Houston: shifts in ID to serve self-regulation
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Psychology 415; Social Basis of Health Behavior Attitudes & self-regulation 15 Goals, 2: Action Identifications Lose weight & look better Dietary change Meal planning Green vegetable each meal Breakfast on work days Simple carbohydrate avoidance No sconesExercise Cardio- vascular Run 5 days / week Strength training No elevators High Low Abstract & longer-term, end states Difficult to monitor: slow-moving & non-specific Typically “approach” oriented / positive affect. Concrete & immediate, behavioral intentions Specific, easier to monitor Mix of approach & avoidant (+ & - affect).
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Psychology 415; Social Basis of Health Behavior Attitudes & self-regulation 16 Self-regulation: Basic cybernetic frame Behavioral intentions Behavioral standards Self-monitoring of ongoing behavior Actual behavior Available feedback Behavioral “Comparator”
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Psychology 415; Social Basis of Health Behavior Attitudes & self-regulation 17 Potential self-regulation failures Behavioral intentions Behavioral standards Self-monitoring of ongoing behavior Actual behavior Available feedback Behavioral “Comparator” Loose linkage between attitude / intention behavior Role of habit / “automaticity,” contextual constraints Social network press for behavioral consistency Ambivalence: affective attraction of bad behavior v. pallid, high- level action identification of being good Mixed, complex attitudes
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Psychology 415; Social Basis of Health Behavior Attitudes & self-regulation 18 Potential self-regulation failure, 2 Behavioral intentions Behavioral standards Self-monitoring of ongoing behavior Actual behavior Available feedback Behavioral “Comparator” Clarity & specificity of behavioral standards Concreteness & specificity of behavioral plans Extrinsic v. intrinsic motivation & standards
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Psychology 415; Social Basis of Health Behavior Attitudes & self-regulation 19 Potential self-regulation failure, 3 Behavioral intentions Behavioral standards Self-monitoring of ongoing behavior Actual behavior Available feedback Behavioral “Comparator” Quality & amount of feedback Frequency & visibility of target behaviors Availability of feedback from others Simple attention, memory capacity
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Psychology 415; Social Basis of Health Behavior Attitudes & self-regulation 20 Effortful self-awareness of behavior Automaticity of target behavior – Monitoring is… Productive for initiating behaviors Disruptive for automatic behaviors Effortful monitoring “Coping fatigue”, generally aversive Tediousness of formal monitoring Potential self-regulation failure, 4 Behavioral intentions Behavioral standards Self-monitoring of ongoing behavior Actual behavior Available feedback Behavioral “Comparator”
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Psychology 415; Social Basis of Health Behavior Attitudes & self-regulation 21 Potential self-regulation failure, 5 Behavioral intentions Behavioral standards Self-monitoring of ongoing behavior Actual behavior Available feedback Behavioral “Comparator” Quality & nature of comparison Self-focused attention as prerequisite for comparator Clarity & specificity of behavioral standards Cognitive avoidance of “hot” information (i.e., failure)
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Psychology 415; Social Basis of Health Behavior Attitudes & self-regulation 22 Potential self-regulation failure, 6 Behavioral intentions Behavioral standards Self-monitoring of ongoing behavior Actual behavior Available feedback Behavioral “Comparator” Negative “actual” v. “ought” or “ideal” comparisons “Actual” versus: “ought” anxiety, shame avoidance “ideal” depression amotivation Self-efficacy: behavioral change versus avoidance Self-regulatory resource models
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Psychology 415; Social Basis of Health Behavior Attitudes & self-regulation 23 Potential self-regulation failure, 7 Behavioral intentions Behavioral standards Self-monitoring of ongoing behavior Actual behavior Available feedback Behavioral “Comparator” Lowering standards in the face of failure Motivated downward comparison processes “What the hell” phenomenon Cognitive escape / “defensive” self-evaluation
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