| Literature DB >> 30572936 |
Gaby Judah1, Benjamin Gardner2, Michael G Kenward3, Bianca DeStavola4, Robert Aunger5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Habits (learned automatic responses to contextual cues) are considered important in sustaining health behaviour change. While habit formation is promoted by repeating behaviour in a stable context, little is known about what other variables may contribute, and whether there are variables which may accelerate the habit formation process. The aim of this study was to explore variables relating to the perceived reward value of behaviour - pleasure, perceived utility, perceived benefits, and intrinsic motivation. The paper tests whether reward has an impact on habit formation which is mediated by behavioural repetition, and whether reward moderates the relationship between repetition and habit formation.Entities:
Keywords: Automaticity; Behaviour change; Habit formation; Intervention; Reward
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30572936 PMCID: PMC6302524 DOI: 10.1186/s40359-018-0270-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychol ISSN: 2050-7283
Study procedure
| Timepoint | Home visit focus | Online questionnaire content |
|---|---|---|
| T0: 0 weeks | Consent |
|
| T1: 4 weeks |
| Measures: Behaviour self-report, automaticity, context stability, intention, rewarding variables |
| T2: 8 weeks | n/a | Measures: Behaviour self-report, automaticity, context stability, intention, rewarding variables |
| T3: 12 weeks | n/a | Measures: Behaviour self-report, automaticity, context stability, intention, rewarding variables |
| T4: 16 weeks | Semi-structured interview | Measures: Behaviour self-report, automaticity, context stability, intention, rewarding variables |
Note: Due to data collection problems, the context stability items were not tested for the first 38 participants
Fig. 1Full Structural Equation Model. Note. The term “Reward” here denotes each of the reward variables, which were tested in turn in separate models. The model was repeated for each of the timepoints T1-T4. Reward and behaviour, stability and behaviour, and intention and behaviour were allowed to interact in their effect on automaticity. This is termed a moderated effect, and is indicated on the diagram by the grey arrows. The reward, intention and context stability variables were those measured at the same timepoint as the behaviour and automaticity outcomes
Mean behaviour frequency and automaticity for flossing and vitamin C throughout the study
| Outcome | Time 0 Mean (SD) | Time 1 Mean (SD) | Time 2 Mean (SD) | Time 3 Mean (SD) | Time 4 Mean (SD) | t test |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Flossing behaviour | 0.85 (1.01) | 1.69 (1.91) | 4.55 (2.42) | 4.39 (2.41) | 4.10 (2.58) | 8.29*** |
| Flossing automaticity | 1.54 (1.55) | 2.11 (1.73) | 3.54 (1.81) | 3.67 (1.96) | 3.75 (2.07) | 7.82*** |
| Vitamin C behaviour | 1.35 (2.60) | 4.61 (2.59) | 4.06 (2.80) | 4.01 (2.88) | 3.89 (2.14) | 5.53*** |
| Vitamin C automaticity | 2.11 (1.25) | 3.76 (1.90) | 3.64 (2.10) | 3.44 (2.13) | 3.53 (2.31) | 5.30*** |
Note: The behaviour values are recorded as weekly behaviour frequency
The t test results refer to the comparison between behaviour/automaticity levels at the point of the intervention and the end of the study. T0 values for vitamin C reflect pre-intervention levels, and T1 values for flossing reflect pre-intervention levels
*** p < .001
Pairwise correlations between all flossing variables
| 1. | 2. | 3. | 4. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Behavioura | ||||
| 2. Automaticitya | .603*** | |||
| 3. Pleasure | .465*** | .678*** | ||
| 4. Context stability | .470*** | .438*** | .421*** | |
| 5. Intentionb | .518*** | .532*** | .592*** | .366*** |
Note: aCorrelations with behaviour and automaticity are conducted at T4 only
bSkewed variable, and therefore all correlations with this variable are with Spearman’s rho
*** p < .001
Pairwise correlations between all vitamin C reward variables
| 1. | 2. | 3. | 4. | 5. | 6. | 7. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Behavioura | |||||||
| 2. Automaticitya | .669*** | ||||||
| 3. Pleasure | .344** | .621*** | |||||
| 4. Intrinsic motivation | .364** | .640*** | .770*** | ||||
| 5. Perceived utility | .232* | .427*** | .560*** | .647*** | |||
| 6. Perceived benefits | .150 | .333** | .389*** | .563*** | .545*** | ||
| 7. Context stability | .635*** | .720*** | .345*** | .492*** | .282*** | ||
| 8. Intentionb | .459*** | .542*** | .486*** | .574*** | .474*** | .363*** | .462*** |
Note: aCorrelations with behaviour and automaticity are conducted at T4 only
b Skewed variable, and therefore all correlations with this variable are with Spearman’s rho
* p < .05, ** p < .01, *** p < .001
Summary of reward relationships within the SEM models for flossing
| Pathways from reward to automaticity | Time 1, b | Time 2, b | Time 3, b | Time 4, b |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mediated effect | ||||
| Reward-Behaviour | .248* |
| .127 | −.010 |
| Behaviour-Automaticity | .230 | .174** | ||
| Moderated effect | −.010 | .042 | −.039 | |
Note: for flossing, the intervention took place at T1 (at which point, so significant reward relationships were observed). For flossing, reward was measured in terms of pleasure
Due to complexity of the model, the mediated effect was not calculated, but instead, significant pathways along the mediated mechanism were reported. Significant mediated effects are only represented in the coefficients marked in bold, where more than one significant coefficient makes a complete significant pathway between reward to automaticity. (Items in italics reflect a mediation relationship from reward to automaticity that is via both via intention and behaviour, rather than just via behaviour. The coefficients from reward to intention are marked R-I, and the coefficients from intention to behaviour are marked I-B)
* p < .05, ** p < .01, *** p ≤ .001
Summary of reward relationships within the SEM models for taking vitamin C tablets
| Potential reward type | Pathway | Time 1, b | Time 2, b | Time 3, b | Time 4, b |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pleasure | Mediated | ||||
| Reward-Behaviour | .215 |
| −.066 | −.116 | |
| Behaviour Automaticity | .175* |
| .300*** | .110 | |
| Moderated | .048 |
|
| .062 | |
| Intrinsic motivation | Mediated | ||||
| Reward-Behaviour | .208 | .120 | .039 | −.112 | |
| Behaviour-Automaticity | .184* | .167** | .280*** | .123 | |
| Moderated |
|
| .028 | .001 | |
| Perceived utility | Mediated | ||||
| Reward-Behaviour | .323 | −.177 | .074 | −.147 | |
| Behaviour-Automaticity | .201** | .168** | .269*** | .086 | |
| Moderated | .086 | .033 | .059 | .004 | |
| Perceived benefit | Mediated | ||||
| Reward-Behaviour | −.410 | −.234 | |||
| Behaviour-Automaticity | .205** | - | - | .088 | |
| Moderated | .103 | .037 | |||
Note: for vitamin C, the intervention took place at T0
Significant mediated effects are only represented in the coefficients marked in bold, where more than one significant coefficient makes a complete significant pathway between reward to automaticity. (Items in italics reflect a mediation relationship from reward to automaticity that is via both via intention and behaviour, rather than just via behaviour. The coefficients from reward to intention are marked R-I, and the coefficients from intention to behaviour are marked I-B). Perceived benefit was not measured at Time 2 or Time 3
* p < .05, ** p < .01, *** p ≤ .001