Literature DB >> 29489632

Temporal Immediacy: A Two-System Theory of Mind for Understanding and Changing Health Behaviors.

Paul F Cook1, Sarah J Schmiege, Blaine Reeder, Sara Horton-Deutsch, Nancy K Lowe, Paula Meek.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Health promotion and chronic disease management both require behavior change, but people find it hard to change behavior despite having good intentions. The problem arises because patients' narratives about experiences and intentions are filtered through memory and language. These narratives inaccurately reflect intuitive decision-making or actual behaviors.
OBJECTIVES: We propose a principle-temporal immediacy-as a moderator variable that explains which of two mental systems (narrative or intuitive) will be activated in any given situation. We reviewed multiple scientific areas to test temporal immediacy as an explanation for findings.
METHODS: In an iterative process, we used evidence from philosophy, cognitive neuroscience, behavioral economics, symptom science, and ecological momentary assessment to develop our theoretical perspective. These perspectives each suggest two cognitive systems that differ in their level of temporal immediacy: an intuitive system that produces behavior in response to everyday states and a narrative system that interprets and explains these experiences after the fact.
FINDINGS: Writers from Plato onward describe two competing influences on behavior-often with moral overtones. People tend to identify with the language-based narrative system and blame unhelpful results on the less accessible intuitive system, but neither is completely rational, and the intuitive system has strengths based on speed and serial processing. The systems differ based on temporal immediacy-the description of an experience as either "now" or "usually"-with the intuitive system generating behaviors automatically in real time and the narrative system producing beliefs about the past or future. DISCUSSION: The principle of temporal immediacy is a tool to integrate nursing science with other disciplinary traditions and to improve research and practice. Interventions should build on each system's strengths, rather than treating the intuitive system as a barrier for the narrative system to overcome. Nursing researchers need to study the roles and effects of both systems.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 29489632     DOI: 10.1097/NNR.0000000000000265

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nurs Res        ISSN: 0029-6562            Impact factor:   2.381


  4 in total

1.  Daily Predictors of ART Adherence Among Young Men Living with HIV Who Have Sex with Men: A Longitudinal Daily Diary Study.

Authors:  Emily M Cherenack; Kimberly Enders; Betty M Rupp; Arlene C Seña; Matthew Psioda
Journal:  AIDS Behav       Date:  2021-11-09

2.  The High-Intensity Exercise Study to Attenuate Limitations and Train Habits in Older Adults With HIV (HEALTH): A Research Protocol.

Authors:  Vitor H F Oliveira; Kristine M Erlandson; Paul F Cook; Catherine Jankowski; Samantha MaWhinney; Sahera Dirajlal-Fargo; Leslie Knaub; Chao-Pin Hsiao; Christine Horvat Davey; Allison R Webel
Journal:  J Assoc Nurses AIDS Care       Date:  2022 Mar-Apr 01       Impact factor: 1.354

Review 3.  Diet Adherence among Adults with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus: A Concept Analysis.

Authors:  Nasser Al-Salmi; Paul Cook; Melba Sheila D'Souza
Journal:  Oman Med J       Date:  2022-03-22

4.  Low- and High-Intensity Physical Activity Among People with HIV: Multilevel Modeling Analysis Using Sensor- and Survey-Based Predictors.

Authors:  Paul Cook; Catherine Jankowski; Kristine M Erlandson; Blaine Reeder; Whitney Starr; Mary Beth Flynn Makic
Journal:  JMIR Mhealth Uhealth       Date:  2022-04-14       Impact factor: 4.947

  4 in total

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