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Network Interventions for Changing Physical Activity Behaviour in Preadolescents.

Antonios ProestakisEugenia Polizzi di SorrentinoHelen Elizabeth BrownEsther van SluijsAnkur ManiSandra CaldeiraBenedikt Herrmann
Published in: Nature human behaviour (2018)
Network interventions can help achieve behavioural change by inducing peer-pressure in the network. However, inducing peer-pressure without considering the structure of the existing social network may render the intervention ineffective or weaker. In a 7-week school-based field experiment using preadolescents' physical activity (PA) as a proxy for estimating behavioural change, we test the hypothesis that boys' and girls' distinct networks are susceptible to different social incentives. We run three different social-rewards schemes, in which classmates' rewards depend on the PA of two friends either reciprocally (directly or indirectly) or collectively. Compared to a random-rewards control, social-rewards schemes had an overall significantly positive effect on PA (51.8% increase), with females being more receptive to the direct reciprocity scheme (76.4%) and males to team (collective) rewards (131.5%). Differences in the sex-specific sub-networks can explain these findings. Network interventions adapted to the network-specific characteristics may constitute a powerful tool for behavioural change.
Keyphrases
  • physical activity
  • healthcare
  • mental health
  • randomized controlled trial
  • body mass index
  • palliative care
  • network analysis
  • hepatitis c virus
  • sleep quality
  • men who have sex with men
  • human immunodeficiency virus