Which behaviors do attitudes predict? Meta-analyzing the effects of social pressure and perceived difficulty
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2005
Abstract
A meta-analysis of 797 studies and 1,001 effect sizes tested a theoretical hypothesis that situational constraints, such as perceived social pressure and perceived difficulty, weaken the relationship between attitudes and behavior. This hypothesis was confirmed for attitudes toward performing behaviors and for attitudes toward issues and social groups. Meta-analytic estimates of attitude-behavior correlations served to quantify these moderating effects. The present results indicated that the mean attitude-behavior correlation was 41 when people experienced a mean level of social pressure to perform a behavior of mean difficulty. The mean correlation was 30 when people experienced social pressure 1 standard deviation above the mean to perform a behavior that was 1 standard deviation more difficult than the mean. The results suggest a need for increased attention to the "behavior" side of the attitude-behavior equation. Attitudes predict some behaviors better than others. Copyright 2005 by the Educational Publishing Foundation.
Recommended Citation
Wallace, David S.; Paulson, René M.; Lord, Charles G.; and Bond, Charles F., "Which behaviors do attitudes predict? Meta-analyzing the effects of social pressure and perceived difficulty" (2005). College of Humanities and Social Sciences. 301.
https://digitalcommons.uncfsu.edu/college_humanities_social_sciences/301