In theory, knowing an individual's attitude about a topic should allow us to predict his or her behavior. However, in a classic study, Wicker (1969) came to the surprising conclusion that attitudes and behaviors are only weakly related. We present a new theoretical perspective that describes the conditions necessary for an attitude to be translated into a behavior. More specifically, we propose that an attitude (i.e., liking of an end state) is not sufficient to cause behavior. Rather, that liking must first become a desire, which will only occur if an individual likes a potential future state more than the present state. The desire must subsequently be transformed into a goal, which will only occur if the desire is perceived as attainable. The goal must then become a focal goal (i.e., be momentarily dominant in an individual's goal system). Lastly, in order for a particular behavior to be enacted, it must be selected as a means that serves the focal goal. We offer empirical evidence for our theory and describe how it goes beyond previous models of attitude-behavior relations, such as the Theory of Planned Behavior (Fishbein & Ajzen, 2010) and the MODE model (Fazio, 1990).

A new perspective on the attitude-behavior relation: The essential function of goals / Kruglanski, A. W.; Baldner, C.; Chernikova, M.; Lo Destro, C.; Pierro, A.. - In: POLISH PSYCHOLOGICAL BULLETIN. - ISSN 0079-2993. - 49:1(2018), pp. 31-39. [10.24425/119469]

A new perspective on the attitude-behavior relation: The essential function of goals

Baldner C.;Chernikova M.;Lo Destro C.;Pierro A.
2018

Abstract

In theory, knowing an individual's attitude about a topic should allow us to predict his or her behavior. However, in a classic study, Wicker (1969) came to the surprising conclusion that attitudes and behaviors are only weakly related. We present a new theoretical perspective that describes the conditions necessary for an attitude to be translated into a behavior. More specifically, we propose that an attitude (i.e., liking of an end state) is not sufficient to cause behavior. Rather, that liking must first become a desire, which will only occur if an individual likes a potential future state more than the present state. The desire must subsequently be transformed into a goal, which will only occur if the desire is perceived as attainable. The goal must then become a focal goal (i.e., be momentarily dominant in an individual's goal system). Lastly, in order for a particular behavior to be enacted, it must be selected as a means that serves the focal goal. We offer empirical evidence for our theory and describe how it goes beyond previous models of attitude-behavior relations, such as the Theory of Planned Behavior (Fishbein & Ajzen, 2010) and the MODE model (Fazio, 1990).
2018
Attitude; Behavior; Desire; Goal; Liking; Means; Want
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
A new perspective on the attitude-behavior relation: The essential function of goals / Kruglanski, A. W.; Baldner, C.; Chernikova, M.; Lo Destro, C.; Pierro, A.. - In: POLISH PSYCHOLOGICAL BULLETIN. - ISSN 0079-2993. - 49:1(2018), pp. 31-39. [10.24425/119469]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1407729
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