Publication | Open Access
Dispositional Motivations and Message Framing: A Test of the Congruency Hypothesis in College Students.
242
Citations
29
References
2004
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingEducational PsychologyBehavioral AspectCommunicationPsychologyAttitude TheoryStudent MotivationHealth CommunicationCongruency HypothesisBehavior ModificationDispositional MotivationsPublic HealthHealth EducationBehavioral SciencesMessage FramingCommunication StudyHealth PromotionMotivationHealth MessagesBehavior Change (Individual)Interpersonal CommunicationHealth BehaviorAttribution TheoryBehavioral InsightArtsPersuasion
The authors examined the congruency hypothesis that health messages framed to be concordant with dispositional motivations will be most effective in promoting health behaviors. Undergraduate students (N=63) completed a measure of approach/avoidance orientation (behavioral activation/inhibition system) and read a gain- or loss-framed message promoting flossing. Results support the congruency hypothesis: When given a loss-framed message, avoidance-oriented people reported flossing more than approach-oriented people, and when given a gain-framed message, approach-oriented people reported flossing more than avoidance-oriented people. Discussion centers on implications for health interventions and the route by which dispositional motivations affect health behaviors through message framing.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1