Does changing behavioral intentions engender behavior change? A meta-analysis of the experimental evidence

Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
Title
Does changing behavioral intentions engender behavior change? A meta-analysis of the experimental evidence
Abstract
Numerous theories in social and health psychology assume that intentions cause behaviors. However, most tests of the intention- behavior relation involve correlational studies that preclude causal inferences. In order to determine whether changes in behavioral intention engender behavior change, participants should be assigned randomly to a treatment that significantly increases the strength of respective intentions relative to a control condition, and differences in subsequent behavior should be compared. The present research obtained 47 experimental tests of intention-behavior relations that satisfied these criteria. Meta-analysis showed that a medium-to-large change in intention (d = 0.66) leads to a small-to-medium change in behavior (d = 0.36). The review also identified several conceptual factors, methodological features, and intervention characteristics that moderate intention-behavior consistency.
Publication
Psychological Bulletin
Volume
132
Issue
2
Pages
249-268
Date
Mar 2006
Journal Abbr
Psychol Bull
Language
eng
ISSN
0033-2909
Short Title
Does changing behavioral intentions engender behavior change?
Library Catalogue
PubMed
Extra
PMID: 16536643 shortDOI: 10/c9ffrz
Citation
Webb, T. L., & Sheeran, P. (2006). Does changing behavioral intentions engender behavior change? A meta-analysis of the experimental evidence. Psychological Bulletin, 132(2), 249–268. https://doi.org/10.1037/0033-2909.132.2.249