The relationship between attitudinal ambivalence and desire to quit smoking among college smokers
The relationship between attitudinal ambivalence and desire to quit smoking among college smokers
Growing evidence shows that attitudes can exist on a bivariate rather than a bipolar plane. This conceptualization provides a more dynamic approach to studying how attitudinal ambivalence (i. e., evaluating an attitude object as both positive and negative) affects smoking-related behaviors. Based on a sample of 157 college smokers, we obtained preliminary validational support for a smoking-specific felt attitudinal ambivalence scale. Felt attitudinal ambivalence correlated positively with potential for ambivalence, negative attitudes, and negative as well as positive outcome expectancies related to smoking. Smokers who felt more ambivalent reported a greater desire to quit and were more likely to be contemplators, as defined by the transtheoretical model of behavioral change. In multivariate analyses, felt ambivalence toward smoking predicted desire to quit after controlling for positive and negative attitudes and negative smoking consequences. These results provide promising support for the smoking-specific felt-ambivalence scale, and suggest that attitudinal ambivalence should be investigated further as a motivational mechanism to affect smoking cessation.
113-133
Lipkus, Issac M.
cce3ffc5-202d-48fa-ae87-30e3bc463680
Green, Jeffrey D.
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Feaganes, John R.
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Sedikides, Constantine
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January 2001
Lipkus, Issac M.
cce3ffc5-202d-48fa-ae87-30e3bc463680
Green, Jeffrey D.
80a82a76-d773-4a5c-a773-8e7116f554f3
Feaganes, John R.
73d58b09-36fb-46c4-996c-4d0e0ab2247b
Sedikides, Constantine
9d45e66d-75bb-44de-87d7-21fd553812c2
Lipkus, Issac M., Green, Jeffrey D., Feaganes, John R. and Sedikides, Constantine
(2001)
The relationship between attitudinal ambivalence and desire to quit smoking among college smokers.
Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 31 (1), .
(doi:10.1111/j.1559-1816.2001.tb02485.x).
Abstract
Growing evidence shows that attitudes can exist on a bivariate rather than a bipolar plane. This conceptualization provides a more dynamic approach to studying how attitudinal ambivalence (i. e., evaluating an attitude object as both positive and negative) affects smoking-related behaviors. Based on a sample of 157 college smokers, we obtained preliminary validational support for a smoking-specific felt attitudinal ambivalence scale. Felt attitudinal ambivalence correlated positively with potential for ambivalence, negative attitudes, and negative as well as positive outcome expectancies related to smoking. Smokers who felt more ambivalent reported a greater desire to quit and were more likely to be contemplators, as defined by the transtheoretical model of behavioral change. In multivariate analyses, felt ambivalence toward smoking predicted desire to quit after controlling for positive and negative attitudes and negative smoking consequences. These results provide promising support for the smoking-specific felt-ambivalence scale, and suggest that attitudinal ambivalence should be investigated further as a motivational mechanism to affect smoking cessation.
Text
Lipkus, Green, Feaganes, & Sedikides, 2001, JASP
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Published date: January 2001
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Local EPrints ID: 40283
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/40283
ISSN: 0021-9029
PURE UUID: 2a1aee51-a8b0-4666-a15a-bb2df05d986d
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Date deposited: 05 Jul 2006
Last modified: 23 Apr 2026 01:39
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Author:
Issac M. Lipkus
Author:
Jeffrey D. Green
Author:
John R. Feaganes
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