Propelling pride to promote healthy food choices among entity and incremental theorists

DOI

Past research suggests that people's beliefs about the malleability of their body weight influence their motivation to engage in healthful behaviors: people who perceive their body weight as fixed (entity theorists) engage less in healthful behaviors than people who perceive their body weight as changeable (incremental theorists). Accordingly, current health interventions frequently aim at shifting entity theorists' beliefs about the malleability of their body weight. Instead of trying to change these beliefs, we test whether the elicitation of pride from past achievements can serve as an intervention to promote healthful behaviors among entity theorists. In addition, we contrast the effect of pride recall among entity theorists with the effect among incremental theorists. Specifically, we find that entity theorists chose healthier behaviors upon the recall of pride related and unrelated to the health domain – the source of pride does not seem to matter. For incremental theorists, however, the source of pride does matter. While health-related pride led them to persist in making healthy food choices, health-unrelated pride instilled reward-seeking behavior among incremental theorists. Prompting health-related pride might be a viable motivational tool to promote healthy food choices, as it is beneficial for entity theorists without thwarting the motivation of incremental theorists.

IBM SPSS Statistics, 28

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.34894/SZIYKI
Related Identifier https://doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2020.104841
Metadata Access https://dataverse.nl/oai?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=oai_datacite&identifier=doi:10.34894/SZIYKI
Provenance
Creator Storch, Julia ORCID logo
Publisher DataverseNL
Contributor Digital Competence Centre; Koert van Ittersum, University of Groningen; Jing Wan, University of Guelph
Publication Year 2022
Funding Reference Dutch Research Council, 406 18 014
Rights CC-BY-NC-4.0; info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess; http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0
OpenAccess false
Contact Digital Competence Centre (University of Groningen)
Representation
Resource Type Experimental data; Dataset
Format application/x-spss-sav; application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document; application/octet-stream; application/pdf; application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet
Size 47771; 59767; 118086; 186595; 224333; 230239; 18975; 21993; 149210; 29428; 42556; 33323; 21573; 65459; 365167; 2478573; 38343; 698309; 1401232; 560514; 81008; 818081; 271842; 788767; 396474; 11606
Version 1.0
Discipline Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Aquaculture; Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Aquaculture and Veterinary Medicine; Business and Management; Economics; Life Sciences; Social Sciences; Social and Behavioural Sciences; Soil Sciences