| Literature DB >> 29364917 |
Lucija Andre1, Annelies E M van Vianen2, Thea T D Peetsma1, Frans J Oort1.
Abstract
Future time perspective (FTP) may predict individual attitudes and behaviors. However, FTP research includes different FTP conceptualizations and outcomes which hinder generalizing its findings. To solve the inconsistencies in FTP research and generalize the magnitude of FTP as a driver of motivation and behavior, we conducted the first systematical synthesis of FTP relationships in three crucial life domains. Our meta-analyses of FTP studies in education (k = 28), work (k = 17), and health (k = 32) involved N = 31,558 participants, and used a conceptual model for grouping FTP constructs. To address different outcome types, we applied the Theory of Planned Behavior when coding the studies. FTP relationships with outcomes were small-to-medium, were generalizable across domains, and were strongest when the FTP construct included a mixture of cognition, behavioral intention, and affect and, in education, when the FTP measure was domain specific rather than general. There were cross-cultural differences in FTP-outcome relationships. The strength of the FTP-outcome types relationship varied for attitudes, perceived behavioral control, behavioral intention, and behaviors. The lowest effect sizes were found for FTP predicting actual behaviors in education, work, and health and between FTP and health attitudes. Theoretical implications of the findings and future research directions are discussed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29364917 PMCID: PMC5783357 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0190492
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
FTP constructs.
| Construct | Author(s) | Definition | Conceptualization |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bluedorn [ | Distance into the future that individuals and collectivities consider when contemplating events that may happen. | Ranges from short depth to long depth. | |
| Bowels [ | “A clear, organized approach to future events and activities” (p. 561). | Clarity and approach to future events and activities. | |
| Carstensen and Lang [ | Individuals’ perceived belief about how much time they have left in life and how they perceive it. | Open ended (perceiving future in a positive way and concentrating on the options, plans, and goals they can pursue in remaining lifetime) and limited (perceiving many restrictions and boundaries that lie in the time ahead, concentrating on losses and limitations). | |
| De Volder and Lens [ | Cognitive capacity to anticipate immediate and long-term outcomes of a task in a distant future. | Includes cognitive aspect (capacity to look far ahead in the future) and dynamic aspect (capacity to ascribe high value to long-term goals). | |
| Gjesme [ | Degree to which one’s current behavior is influenced by future concerns. | Includes four components: involvement (the degree to which one focuses on future events), anticipation (how well one prepares for the future events), occupation (the amount of time one thinks about the future) and speed (the rate at which one perceives the future approaching). | |
| Husman and Lens [ | “Present anticipation of future goals” (p. 115), or as a person’s conceptualization of future and connection to it. | Two dimensions: connectedness (disposition to anticipate in the present, the long-term consequences of a potential action; it is also sometimes referred as perceived instrumentality or utility) and valence (disposition to ascribe high value to goals in the future relative to goals in the present). | |
| Lewin [ | “The scope of time ahead which influences present behavior” (p. 879). | ||
| Lomranz, Shmotkin, and Katznelson [ | “Ways in which people conceive of, organize, and feel about their future” (p. 407). | ||
| Mello & Worrell [ | Positive or negative attitude towards the future. | ||
| Nurmi [ | Individuals’ thoughts and attitudes toward the future. | Includes motivation (what interests people have in the future), planning (how people plan the realization of their interests), and evaluation (extent to which people expect their interests to be realized). | |
| Nuttin [ | From the subjective point of view, FTP is the area of more or less distant and dense time plans where the intentional consideration over the objects influences behavior. | ||
| Peetsma [ | An attitude toward a certain life domain viewed over time. | Includes cognition (ideas or expectations with regard to the future, and of social realities), affect (an expression of feeling or affection towards a particular life domain in the future), and behavioral intention. | |
| Savickas [ | An attitude toward planning. | It is characterized by a sense of continuity among the past, present, and future as well as optimism and hope about the achievability of goals and denoted by a sense of relatedness across time frames. | |
| Seginer [ | A multidimensional process related to future in different life domains (e.g., education, work family, leisure). | Three components: motivational (value, expectance, control), cognitive representation (hopes and fears), and behavioral (exploration, commitment). | |
| Shipp, Edwards, & Lambert [ | Attention individuals devote to thinking about future. | General thinking related to future. | |
| Simons, Dewitte, & Lens [ | The instrumental value of present activities for reaching valued goals in the future. | Four different types of instrumentality emerged from combining the FTP, goal theory, and the self-determination theory: proximal utility–external regulation (the present task is compulsory and the individual is only driven by extrinsic reasons); proximal utility–internal regulation (there is no direct relation between the present and future task, but the present activity is internally regulated because learning and performing are a goal in itself); distal utility and external regulation (future goals are strived for, but extrinsic rewards are at the center); distal utility and internal regulation (future goals are strived for and regulate present actions). | |
| Strathman, Gleicher, Boninger, & Edwards [ | The extent to which people consider the potential distant outcomes of their current behaviors and are influenced by those potential outcomes. | Immediate and future consequences of one’s current behavior. | |
| Trommsdorff [ | Complex multidimensional system. | Two types of components: cognitive and emotional or motivational. The cognitive component relates to the structure of the events projected into the future, both in terms of time extension (i.e. how far in the future those events are projected) and in terms of the content (i.e., the degree of realism of the objectives, the density of events projected into the future, and the clarity of those objectives). Affective or motivational component reflects the emotional valence of future events. | |
| Zimbardo and Boyd [ | An attitude that entails considering goal planning and achieving. | It is a general and positive tendency toward the future. |
Fig 1Conceptual model for grouping FTP across life domains.
Fig 2PRISMA flow diagram.
Overview and characteristics of the studies in the education domain.
| Study | FTP construct | FTP focus | Country | IC | LTO | UA | IR | Outcome type | Age | Gender | Study design | Effect size | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 661 | CBI | General | USA | 91 | 26 | 46 | 68 | VB | 15 | 41.3 | Cross-sectional | .12 | |
| 300 | CA | General | USA | 91 | 26 | 46 | 68 | VB | 16 | 60 | Cross- sectional | .05 | |
| 255 | CBI | General | USA | 91 | 26 | 46 | 68 | VB | 19.6 | 21.4 | Cross-sectional | .27 | |
| 177 | COG | General | Australia | 90 | 21 | 51 | 71 | VB | 14.5 | 50 | Cross-sectional | .08 | |
| 228 | COG | General | Australia | 90 | 21 | 51 | 71 | UB | 16.5 | 49.6 | Cross-sectional | .24 | |
| 261 | CA | General | USA | 91 | 26 | 46 | 68 | ATB, VB | 15.5 | NA | Cross-sectional | .27 | |
| 275 | CBI | General | Belgium | 75 | 82 | 94 | 57 | ATB, PBC, BI, UB | 17 | 34.4 | Cross-sectional | .38 | |
| 188 | MIX | General | Turkey | 37 | 46 | 85 | 49 | VB | 19.4 | 76.1 | Longitudinal | .02 | |
| 498 | MIX | General | Italy | 76 | 61 | 75 | 30 | VB | 11.9 | 50.2 | Cross- sectional | .32 | |
| 675 | MIX | General | Italy | 76 | 61 | 75 | 30 | VB | 15.8 | 49.8 | Cross- sectional | .21 | |
| 402 | CBI | General | Portugal | 27 | 28 | 99 | 33 | ATB, BI | 16.7 | 38.3 | Cross-sectional | .23 | |
| 368 | CBI | General | China | 25 | 61 | 30 | 24 | ATB, BI | 18.5 | 41.6 | Cross- sectional | .11 | |
| 546 | CBI | General | USA | 91 | 26 | 46 | 68 | UB | 21 | 83.3 | Cross- sectional | .28 | |
| 347 | CBI | General | Australia | 90 | 21 | 51 | 71 | ATB, UB | 22 | 33 | Cross-sectional | .39 | |
| 217 | CBI | General | USA | 91 | 26 | 46 | 68 | PBC | 20.8 | 29 | Cross- sectional | .09 | |
| 606 | MIX | Specific | Netherlands | 80 | 67 | 53 | 68 | UB | 15.5 | 46.6 | Cross-sectional | .35 | |
| 71 | MIX | Specific | Netherlands | 80 | 67 | 53 | 68 | UB | 14 | 50 | Cross-sectional | .50 | |
| 78 | MIX | Specific | Germany | 67 | 83 | 65 | 40 | UB | 14 | 50 | Cross-sectional | .13 | |
| 204 | MIX | Specific | Czech Republic | 58 | 70 | 74 | 29 | UB | 14 | 50 | Cross-sectional | .43 | |
| 134 | MIX | Specific | Switzerland | 68 | 74 | 58 | 66 | UB | 14 | 50 | Cross-sectional | .40 | |
| 678 | MIX | Specific | Netherlands | 80 | 67 | 53 | 68 | PBC | 12.8 | 52 | Longitudinal | .28 | |
| 906 | MIX | Specific | Netherlands | 80 | 67 | 53 | 68 | UB, VB | 12.5 | 55 | Longitudinal | .26 | |
| 231 | MIX | General | USA | 91 | 26 | 46 | 68 | VB | 19 | 32.5 | Cross-sectional | .29 | |
| 134 | CBI | General | Portugal | 27 | 28 | 99 | 33 | ATB | 14.7 | 50 | Cross- sectional | .37 | |
| 295 | COG | Specific | Israel | 54 | 38 | 81 | NA | VB | 17 | 0 | Cross- sectional | −.02 | |
| 198 | MIX | General | USA | 91 | 26 | 46 | 68 | UB, VB | 19 | 30 | Cross-sectional | .13 | |
| 94 | CBI | General | USA | 91 | 26 | 46 | 68 | UB, VB | 23.9 | 19.1 | Cross- sectional | .29 | |
| 815 | CBI | General | USA | 91 | 26 | 46 | 68 | ATB, BI, VB | 14.4 | 46.6 | Cross-sectional | .20 |
Note. N = number of participants included in the effect size estimate; COG = cognition; CBI = cognition and behavioral intention; CA = cognition and affect; MIX = mixture of cognition, behavioral intention, and affect; IC = individualism/collectivism; LTO = long-term orientation; UA = uncertainty-avoidance; IR = indulgence/restraint; ATB = attitude toward behavior; BI = behavioral intention; PBC = perceived behavioral control; UB = unverifiable behavior; VB = verifiable behavior; NA = not available.
Overview and characteristics of the studies in the health domain.
| Study | FTP construct | FTP focus | Country | IC | LTO | UA | IR | Outcome type | Age | Gender | Study design | Effect size | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 423 | MIX | General | USA | 91 | 26 | 46 | 68 | UB | 34.7 | 18.2 | Cross-sectional | .28 | |
| 804 | MIX | General | USA | 91 | 26 | 46 | 68 | VB,UB | 50.5 | 41.4 | Cross- sectional | .11 | |
| 121 | CBI | General | USA | 91 | 26 | 46 | 68 | ATB, BI, UB | 19.45 | 100 | Cross-sectional | .15 | |
| 198 | CBI | General | France | 71 | 63 | 86 | 48 | UB | 21.8 | 50.2 | Cross-sectional | .19 | |
| 322 | MIX | General | UK | 89 | 51 | 35 | 69 | UB | 19.7 | 40.1 | Cross-sectional | .32 | |
| 627 | CBI | General | Canada | 80 | 36 | 48 | 68 | ATB, PBC, UB | 19.7 | NA | Cross-sectional | .12 | |
| 106 | MIX | General | USA | 91 | 26 | 46 | 68 | PBC, UB | 21.1 | 32.1 | Cross- sectional | .23 | |
| 300 | MIX | General | UK | 89 | 51 | 35 | 68 | BI | 39 | 49 | Cross-sectional | .18 | |
| 934 | CBI | General | USA | 91 | 26 | 46 | 68 | PBC, BI, UB | 18.99 | 37.3 | Cross- sectional | .21 | |
| 607 | CBI | General | USA | 91 | 26 | 46 | 68 | UB | 23.4 | 52.6 | Cross- sectional | .28 | |
| 240 | CBI | General | France | 71 | 63 | 86 | 48 | UB | 33.3 | 59.2 | Cross-sectional | .29 | |
| 185 | CBI | General | USA | 91 | 26 | 46 | 68 | ATB, PBC, BI, UB | 16 | 48.1 | Cross-sectional | .10 | |
| 208 | CBI | Specific | Canada | 80 | 36 | 48 | 68 | VB | 45.21 | 24.8 | Cross- sectional | .17 | |
| 357 | CBI | General | Canada | 80 | 36 | 48 | 68 | UB | 19 | 27.7 | Cross-sectional | .21 | |
| 128 | CBI | Specific | Norway | 69 | 35 | 50 | 55 | VB | 17.5 | NA | Cross-sectional | .05 | |
| 1624 | MIX | General | USA | 91 | 26 | 46 | 68 | BI | 19 | 25 | Cross-sectional | .30 | |
| 439 | CBI | General | USA | 91 | 26 | 46 | 68 | UB | 21.02 | 29 | Cross-sectional | .22 | |
| 119 | MIX | General | USA | 91 | 26 | 46 | 68 | ATB, BI | 21 | 59.7 | Cross-sectional | .26 | |
| 232 | MIX | General | USA | 91 | 26 | 46 | 68 | ATB, BI | 21 | 50.9 | Cross- sectional | .16 | |
| 2627 | CBI | General | USA | 91 | 26 | 46 | 68 | UB | 21.42 | 45.8 | Cross-sectional | .14 | |
| 206 | CBI | General | USA | 91 | 26 | 46 | 68 | UB | 23.6 | 35 | Cross-sectional | .19 | |
| 1350 | CBI | General | Italy | 76 | 61 | 75 | 30 | UB | 17.46 | 47.2 | Cross-sectional | .19 | |
| 217 | CBI | General | USA | 91 | 26 | 46 | 68 | UB | 20.8 | 29 | Cross-sectional | .13 | |
| 138 | COG | General | USA | 91 | 26 | 46 | 68 | UB | 13.1 | 42.4 | Cross-sectional | .46 | |
| 806 | MIX | General | Ireland | 70 | 24 | 35 | 65 | UB | 13.5 | 49.6 | Cross-sectional | .11 | |
| 50 | COI | General | UK | 89 | 51 | 35 | 69 | UB | 33.4 | Cross- sectional | .08 | ||
| 336 | MIX | General | USA | 91 | 26 | 46 | 68 | ATB, PBC, BI, UB | 16.3 | 51 | Cross- sectional | .31 | |
| 324 | COI | General | Norway | 69 | 35 | 50 | 55 | ATB, PBC, BI, UB | 24.6 | 76 | Longitudinal | .09 | |
| 376 | COI | General | USA | 91 | 26 | 46 | 68 | UB | 19 | 34.6 | Cross-sectional | .20 | |
| 60 | MIX | General | USA | 91 | 26 | 46 | 68 | ATB, UB | 25 | Cross-sectional | .32 | ||
| 165 | COI | Specific | Netherlands | 80 | 67 | 53 | 68 | UB | 21.29 | 40.6 | Cross-sectional | .39 | |
| 55 | COI | Specific | Netherlands | 80 | 67 | 53 | 68 | UB | 41.38 | 38.2 | Cross-sectional | .25 |
Note. N = number of participants included in the effect size estimate; COG = cognition; CBI = cognition and behavioral intention; CA = cognition and affect; MIX = mixture of cognition, behavioral intention, and affect; IC = individualism/collectivism; LTO = long-term orientation; UA = uncertainty avoidance; IR = indulgence/restraint; ATB = attitude toward behavior; BI = behavioral intention; PBC = perceived behavioral control; UB = unverifiable behavior; VB = verifiable behavior; NA = not available.
FTP construct type coding.
| FTP construct types | Description | Item examples |
|---|---|---|
| Include items about an individual’s ideas and expectations about the future. | “I think about what my future has in store”; “I imagine what tomorrow will bring for me.” | |
| Include items about an individual’s future goals and ways to accomplish these goals (planning, setting, and self-control as delay of gratification). | “When I want to get something done, I make step-by-step plans and think about how to complete each step”; “I consider how things might be in the future, and try to influence those things with my day to day behavior.” | |
| Include items that focus on the affective tone of future cognitions, that is, emotions that are associated with future goals (hope, worry, fear). | “If things don’t get done on time, I don’t worry about it”; “When I think about the future I feel happy.” | |
| Include items that combine cognition, affect and intentions with regard to the future. | “I like to think of the way I will be able to develop my possibilities (capacities/talents) after school”; “I am willing to sacrifice my immediate happiness or well-being in order to achieve future outcomes.” |
Examples of dependent variables based on the theory of planned behavior per life domain.
| Life domain | Outcome type | Example dependent variable |
|---|---|---|
| ATB | Attitude toward schooling | |
| BI | Learning strategy | |
| PBC | Control beliefs about learning | |
| UB | Preparation for assessment | |
| VB | Grade point average | |
| ATB | Career choice satisfaction | |
| BI | Planned effort | |
| PBC | Capability beliefs | |
| UB | Career exploration | |
| VB | Weekly working hours | |
| ATB | Physical activity attitude | |
| BI | Intention to use a condom | |
| PBC | Self-efficacy-diet | |
| UB | Physical activity (daily exercise) | |
| VB | Body mass index |
Note. ATB = attitude toward behavior; BI = behavioral intention; PBC = perceived behavioral control; UB = unverifiable behavior; VB = verifiable behavior.
Overall effect size for FTP and educational, work and, health outcomes.
| Effect size and 95% interval | Test of null (2-Tail) | Heterogeneity | Tau-squared | |||||||||||
| LL | UL | Z | T2 | T | ||||||||||
| 28 | .24 | .22 | .26 | 23.83 | .00 | 128.65 | 27.00 | .00 | 79.01 | .01 | .00 | .00 | .10 | |
| 28 | .24 | .20 | .28 | 10.51 | .00 | |||||||||
| Effect size and 95% interval | Test of null (2-Tail) | Heterogeneity | Tau-squared | |||||||||||
| LL | UL | Z | T2 | T | ||||||||||
| 17 | .24 | .22 | .26 | 22.12 | .00 | 136.49 | 16.00 | .00 | 88.28 | .02 | .01 | .00 | .14 | |
| 17 | .24 | .17 | .31 | 6.82 | .00 | |||||||||
| Effect size and 95% interval | Test of null (2-Tail) | Heterogeneity | Tau-squared | |||||||||||
| LL | UL | Z | T2 | T | ||||||||||
| 32 | .20 | .18 | .22 | 24.57 | .00 | 99.07 | 31.00 | .00 | 68.71 | .01 | .00 | .00 | .07 | |
| 32 | .21 | .18 | .24 | 12.74 | .00 | |||||||||
Note. k = number of studies; r = effect size; LL = lower limit; UL = upper limit.
***p < .0001.
Overview and characteristics of the studies in the work domain.
| Study | FTP construct | FTP focus | Country | IC | LTO | UA | IR | Outcome type | Age | Gender | Study design | Effect size | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 423 | CBI | General | Turkey | 37 | 46 | 85 | 49 | ATB, PBC, BI, UB | 19.86 | 18.7 | Cross-sectional | .21 | |
| 396 | CBI | General | Turkey | 37 | 46 | 85 | 49 | BI | 20.53 | 30.6 | Cross-sectional | .34 | |
| 498 | MIX | General | Italy | 76 | 61 | 75 | 30 | ATB, PBC | 11.9 | 50.2 | Cross-sectional | .42 | |
| 675 | MIX | General | Italy | 76 | 61 | 75 | 30 | PBC, BI | 15.79 | 48.9 | Cross-sectional | .43 | |
| 236 | CBI | General | India | 48 | 51 | 40 | 26 | PBC | 28.14 | 59.7 | Cross-sectional | .27 | |
| 150 | CBI | Specific | Norway | 69 | 35 | 50 | 55 | VB | 15 | 44.7 | Cross-sectional | −.25 | |
| 620 | MIX | General | Portugal | 76 | 61 | 99 | 33 | ATB, UB | 16.04 | 44.8 | Cross-sectional | .25 | |
| 170 | CBI | General | Belgium | 75 | 82 | 94 | 57 | ATB | 17.5 | 47 | Cross-sectional | .19 | |
| 97 | MIX | General | UK | 89 | 51 | 35 | 69 | ATB, PBC, BI | 19.5 | 62.9 | Cross-sectional | .33 | |
| 132 | COG | General | USA | 91 | 26 | 46 | 68 | ATB, PBC, BI | 38.16 | NA | Cross-sectional | .16 | |
| 362 | COG | General | USA | 91 | 26 | 46 | 68 | ATB, BI | 39 | NA | Longitudinal | .07 | |
| 3345 | CA | General | Japan | 46 | 88 | 92 | 42 | ATB, PBC, BI | 30.13 | 28 | Cross-sectional | .19 | |
| 397 | MIX | General | USA | 91 | 26 | 46 | 68 | ATB, UB, VB | 42.67 | 50 | Cross-sectional | .23 | |
| 103 | MIX | General | USA | 91 | 26 | 46 | 68 | ATB, UB | 35.68 | 47.1 | Cross-sectional | .55 | |
| 233 | MIX | General | USA | 91 | 26 | 46 | 68 | ATB, UB | 29.91 | 30.2 | Cross-sectional | .35 | |
| 195 | CBI | General | USA | 91 | 26 | 46 | 68 | ATB, PBC | 39.85 | 40.2 | Cross-sectional | .09 | |
| 218 | MIX | General | USA | 91 | 26 | 46 | 68 | PBC | 19.63 | 51 | Cross-sectional | .19 |
Note. N = number of participants included in the effect size estimate; COG = cognition; CBI = cognition and behavioral intention; CA = cognition and affect; MIX = mixture of cognition, behavioral intention, and affect; IC = individualism/collectivism; LTO = long-term orientation; UA = uncertainty avoidance; IR = indulgence/restraint; ATB = attitude toward behavior; BI = behavioral intention; PBC = perceived behavioral control; UB = unverifiable behavior; VB = verifiable behavior; NA = not available.