reviewAnnals of Behavioral MedicineMay 27, 2011BRONZE OA

A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of Applications of the Self-Report Habit Index to Nutrition and Physical Activity Behaviours

Mortimer Market Centre · University College London · +2 more institutions

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Background

Health behaviour models typically neglect habitual action. The Self-Report Habit Index (SRHI) permits synthesis of evidence of the influence of habit on behaviour. PURPOSE: The purpose of this study is to review evidence around mean habit strength, habit-behaviour correlations, and habit x intention interactions, from applications of the SRHI to dietary, physical activity, and active travel behaviour. METHOD: Electronic database searches identified 126 potentially relevant papers. Twenty-two papers (21 datasets) passed eligibility screening. Mean scores and correlations were meta-analysed using fixed, random and mixed effects, and interactions were synthesised via narrative review.

Results

Twenty-three habit-behaviour correlations and nine habit x intention interaction tests were found. Typical habit strength was located around the SRHI midpoint. Weighted habit-behaviour effects were medium-to-strong (fixed: r + = 0.44; random: r + = 0.46). Eight tests found that habit moderated the intention-behaviour relation.

Citation impact

585
total citations
FWCI
16.65
Percentile
100%
References
72
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Health psychology
  • Meta-analysis
  • Index (typography)
  • Habit
  • Physical activity
  • Psychology
  • Body mass index
  • Medicine
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Zero hunger
No related works found for this paper.