J Aging Phys Act. 2020 Apr 24;28(2):173-179. doi: 10.1123/japa.2019-0059.
Older adults process and remember positive information relatively better than negative information, compared with younger adults; this is known as the positivity effect. This study examined whether older adults compared with younger adults also respond differently to positively and negatively framed questionnaire items. Participants (N = 275; age = 18-81 years) were randomly assigned to a positively or negatively framed version of a self-efficacy for physical activity questionnaire. Self-efficacy, physical activity intentions, and planned physical activity in the following week were regressed on experimental group and age, controlling for baseline physical activity and covariates. A significant Age × Frame interaction showed that item framing made a difference in planned physical activity for the oldest age group (+350 min compared with the youngest group). This study provides initial support for the positivity effect in item framing on physical activity plans, but not on intentions or self-efficacy. Item framing should be taken into consideration for accurate measurement, but could also be a simple intervention approach.
老年人在处理和记忆积极信息方面比年轻人相对更好,这被称为正性效应。本研究旨在探讨老年人是否对正性和负性框架的问卷条目有不同的反应。参与者(N=275;年龄 18-81 岁)被随机分配到一个积极或消极框架的身体活动自我效能感问卷。在控制基线身体活动和协变量的情况下,将自我效能、身体活动意向和下周计划的身体活动回归到实验组和年龄上。年龄与框架的显著交互作用表明,对于年龄最大的年龄组,项目框架在计划身体活动方面存在差异(与最年轻的年龄组相比增加了 350 分钟)。本研究初步支持了项目框架在身体活动计划上的正性效应,但在意图或自我效能方面则不然。为了准确测量,应考虑项目框架,但它也可以是一种简单的干预方法。