Login / Signup

Cognitive-Affective Inconsistency and Ambivalence: Impact on the Overall Attitude-Behavior Relationship.

Mark T ConnerSarah WildingFrenk van HarreveldJonas Dalege
Published in: Personality & social psychology bulletin (2020)
This research explored whether overall attitude is a stronger predictor of behavior when underlying cognitive-affective inconsistency or ambivalence is low versus high. Across three prospective studies in different behaviors and populations (Study 1: eating a low-fat diet, N = 136 adults, eating five fruit and vegetables per day, N = 135 adults; Study 2: smoking initiation, N = 4,933 adolescents; and Study 3: physical activity, N = 909 adults) we tested cognitive-affective inconsistency and ambivalence individually and simultaneously as moderators of the overall attitude-behavior relationship. Across studies, more similar effects were observed for inconsistency compared with ambivalence (in both individual and simultaneous analyses). Meta-analysis across studies supported this conclusion with both cognitive-affective inconsistency and ambivalence being significant moderators when considered on their own, but only inconsistency being significant when tested simultaneously. The reported studies highlight the importance of cognitive-affective inconsistency as a determinant of the strength of overall attitude.
Keyphrases
  • physical activity
  • bipolar disorder
  • case control
  • systematic review
  • weight loss
  • body mass index
  • risk assessment
  • drinking water