Wilding et al 2016 - The question-behaviour effect - A theoretical and methodological review and meta-analysis.pdf (2.86 MB)
The question-behaviour effect: a theoretical and methodological review and meta-analysis
journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-09, 03:59 authored by Sarah Wilding, Mark Conner, Tracy Sandberg, Andrew Prestwich, Rebecca Lawton, Chantelle Wood, Eleanor MilesEleanor Miles, Gaston Godin, Paschal SheeranResearch has demonstrated that asking people questions about a behaviour can lead to behaviour change. Despite many, varied studies in different domains, it is only recently that this phenomenon has been studied under the umbrella term of the question-behaviour effect (QBE) and moderators of the effect have been investigated. With a particular focus on our own contributions, this article: (1) provides an overview of QBE research; (2) reviews and offers new evidence concerning three theoretical accounts of the QBE (behavioural simulation and processing fluency; attitude accessibility; cognitive dissonance); (3) reports a new meta-analysis of QBE studies (k = 66, reporting 94 tests) focusing on methodological moderators. The findings of this meta-analysis support a small significant effect of the QBE (g = 0.14, 95% CI = 0.11, 0.18, p < .001) with smaller effect sizes observed in more carefully controlled studies that exhibit less risk of bias and (4) also considers directions for future research on the QBE, especially studies that use designs with low risk of bias and consider desirable and undesirable behaviour separately.
History
Publication status
- Published
File Version
- Published version
Journal
European Review of Social PsychologyISSN
1046-3283Publisher
Taylor & FrancisExternal DOI
Issue
1Volume
27Page range
196-230Department affiliated with
- Psychology Publications
Full text available
- Yes
Peer reviewed?
- Yes