التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: |
Understanding the intention-to-behaviour relationship for adolescents: an application of the multi-process action control model. |
المؤلفون: |
Haider, Imran, Brown, Denver MY, Bray, Steven R., Dutta, Pallavi, Rhodes, Ryan E., Kwan, Matthew YW |
المصدر: |
International Journal of Sport & Exercise Psychology; Jan2024, Vol. 22 Issue 1, p52-69, 18p |
مصطلحات موضوعية: |
CONTROL (Psychology), TEENAGERS, PHYSICAL activity, AMBIVALENCE, DESCRIPTIVE statistics, ADOLESCENCE, PLANNED behavior theory |
مستخلص: |
The multi-process action control model (M-PAC) is an integrative model specifically designed to evaluate intention-behaviour gaps. To date, however, the processes through which intentions are translated into action have largely been underexplored among adolescents. The primary purpose of the study was to investigate the distribution of intention-behaviour profiles during late adolescence; and to apply the M-PAC framework to assess predictors of these profiles. Our sample included 1176 grade 11 students (Mage = 15.85 ± 0.38, 45.6% male) that completed an online questionnaire as part of the baseline cohort in the ADAPT study. The questionnaire assessed the reflective, regulatory, and reflexive processes outlined within M-PAC, and a self-reported measure of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity. Following the use of a novel tertiary split, six intention-behaviour profiles were observed: inactive non-intenders (7.1%; n = 83), active non-intenders (2.8%; n = 33), inactive quasi-intenders (20.6%; n = 242), active quasi-intenders (19.2%; n = 226), unsuccessful intenders (12.5%; n = 147) and successful intenders (37.8%; n = 445). Descriptive statistics revealed successful intenders reported the highest scores on all M-PAC predictors, followed by unsuccessful intenders. A graded response pattern continued for quasi-intenders and non-intenders, with inactive non-intenders scoring the lowest across all M-PAC variables. The current study offers new insight into the intention-behaviour gap by differentiating adolescents with more conviction in their intentions from those that report intention ambivalence to create six intention-behaviour profiles. Findings demonstrate strong support for the core tenets of M-PAC in predicting physical activity intention-behaviour profiles during late adolescence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
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قاعدة البيانات: |
Complementary Index |