Duke University, USA.
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA.
J Health Psychol. 2023 Dec;28(14):1307-1319. doi: 10.1177/13591053221144440. Epub 2023 Jan 3.
The COVID-19 pandemic provides a naturalistic test of whether pandemic-related disruptions weaken habits and undermine behavior stability. We hypothesized that better capacity to effortfully guide behavior (self-regulation) would buffer this effect and be associated with behavior stability and development of new habits to accomplish daily behaviors. A cross-sectional study of 416 MTurk workers recruited in April 2020 ( = 34.60, = 11.51) indicated that pandemic-related disruptions generally exceeded people's capacity to effortfully modify their behavior. Self-regulation related to the development of new habits and to lower likelihood that work productivity decreased. Self-regulation also protected against the effect of disruption on the likelihood that substance use increased. Besides these associations, self-regulation was largely unrelated to health-related behaviors and, in some instances, associated with poorer outcomes. These findings underscore the need to appreciate the impact of contextual disruptions in interpreting and promoting change in health-related behaviors.
COVID-19 大流行提供了一个自然的测试,以检验与大流行相关的干扰是否会削弱习惯并破坏行为稳定性。我们假设,更好地努力引导行为的能力(自我调节)将缓冲这种影响,并与行为稳定性和新习惯的发展相关,以完成日常行为。对 2020 年 4 月招募的 416 名 MTurk 工人进行的横断面研究( = 34.60, = 11.51)表明,与大流行相关的干扰通常超过了人们努力改变行为的能力。自我调节与新习惯的发展以及降低工作生产力下降的可能性有关。自我调节还有助于防止干扰对物质使用增加的可能性的影响。除了这些关联之外,自我调节与与健康相关的行为在很大程度上没有关系,并且在某些情况下与较差的结果相关。这些发现强调了需要在解释和促进健康相关行为的改变时,了解环境干扰的影响。