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'I Feel Better When…': An Analysis of The Memory-Experience Gap for Peoples' Estimates of The Relationship between Health Behaviours and Experiences
JournalArticle (Originalarbeit in einer wissenschaftlichen Zeitschrift)
 
ID 3899343
Author(s) Gloster, Andrew T.; Meyer, Andrea H.; Witthauer, Cornelia; Lieb, Roselind; Mata, Jutta
Author(s) at UniBasel Lieb, Roselind
Gloster, Andrew
Meyer, Andrea Hans
Gees, Alina
Year 2017
Title 'I Feel Better When…': An Analysis of The Memory-Experience Gap for Peoples' Estimates of The Relationship between Health Behaviours and Experiences
Journal Psychology & Health
Volume 32
Number 9
Pages / Article-Number 1152-1166
Abstract People often overestimate how strongly behaviours and experiences are related. This memory-experience gap might have important implications for health care settings, which often require people to estimate associations, such as "my mood is better when I exercise". This study examines how subjective correlation estimates between health behaviours and experiences relate to calculated correlations from online reports and whether subjective estimates are associated with engagement in actual health behaviour.; Seven-month online study on physical activity, sleep, affect and stress, with 61 online assessments.; University students (N = 168) retrospectively estimated correlations between physical activity, sleep, positive affect and stress over the seven-month study period.; Correlations between experiences and behaviours (online data) were small (r = -.12-.14), estimated correlations moderate (r = -.35-.24). Correspondence between calculated and estimated correlations was low. Importantly, estimated correlations of physical activity with stress, positive affect and sleep were associated with actual engagement in physical activity.; Estimation accuracy of relations between health behaviours and experiences is low. However, association estimates could be an important predictor of actual health behaviours. This study identifies and quantifies estimation inaccuracies in health behaviours and points towards potential systematic biases in health settings, which might seriously impair intervention efficacy.
Publisher Taylor & Francis
ISSN/ISBN 0887-0446 ; 1476-8321
edoc-URL http://edoc.unibas.ch/56157/
Full Text on edoc Available
Digital Object Identifier DOI 10.1080/08870446.2017.1327586
PubMed ID http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28498009
ISI-Number 000407907400008
 
   

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