Comparing habit-behaviour relationships for organised versus leisure time physical activity.

Katerina Newman, Cyril Forestier, Boris Cheval, Zachary Zenko, Margaux de Chanaleilles, Benjamin Gardner, Amanda L Rebar
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Abstract

Evidence shows that people with strong physical activity habits tend to engage in more physical activity than those with weaker habits, but little is known about how habit influences specific types of physical activity. This study aimed to test whether mean level of habit strength and magnitude of the habit strength - behaviour association differed as a function of physical activity modality. Participants (N = 120; M age = 25 years, 75% female) who reported engaging in organised sport separately reported their habit strength for organised sport and leisure time physical activity as well as the time they spent engaging in these physical activity behaviours. Means comparisons and multilevel modelling revealed that people had significantly stronger habit for organised sport than for leisure time physical activity. Crucially, no significant difference was found in the magnitude of the sport-habit and leisure-habit link. Post-hoc analyses revealed that habit was stronger for team sport compared to individual sport, but that there was no significant difference in sport-habit association between team and individual sports. Research should therefore focus on identifying the characteristics of team sports-based activity that are particularly conducive to habit formation as a precursor to developing interventions to promote performance of leisure time activity in a way that would attain such characteristics.

比较有组织和休闲时间体育活动的习惯-行为关系
有证据表明,有强烈体育活动习惯的人往往比那些习惯较弱的人参与更多的体育活动,但人们对习惯如何影响特定类型的体育活动知之甚少。本研究旨在测试习惯强度的平均水平和习惯强度-行为关联的大小是否随身体活动方式的不同而不同。参与者(N = 120;(年龄= 25岁,75%为女性)分别报告了他们参加有组织运动和休闲时间体育活动的习惯强度以及他们花在这些体育活动行为上的时间。均值比较和多层模型揭示了人们
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