The main aim of this study was to examine the role of identification, when considering intentional social actions, that is behavior which involves the joint intentions of two or more people (we-intentions; Toumela, 1995). In this longitudinal study (N = 300)) the target behavior was to contribute, together with the other family members, in maintaining a positive family budget. Both pro-active (of concrete support) and foregoing behaviors were measured. To explain processes, we tested alternative models by using structural equation modeling with latent variables (LISREL 8): planned behavior theory (Ajzen, 1991); goal-directed behavior model (MGB, Bagozzi & Lee, 2002). MGB had the greatest explanatory and predictive power. A second-order factor of identification influenced we-intentions. Moreover, findings showed that behaviors were affected by a general second-order factor of intentionality representing individual and shared intentions to act in favor of the ingroup (family). Behavior was affected by a general second-order factor of intentionality representing individual and shared intentions to act in favor of the ingroup.

Mari, S., Bagozzi, R. (2013). Explanatory models of we-intentions: A longitudinal study in the Italian context.. In Atti di 10th Biennial Conference of Asian Association of Social Psychology (AASP), Yogyakarta, Indonesia, August 21-24.

Explanatory models of we-intentions: A longitudinal study in the Italian context.

MARI, SILVIA;
2013

Abstract

The main aim of this study was to examine the role of identification, when considering intentional social actions, that is behavior which involves the joint intentions of two or more people (we-intentions; Toumela, 1995). In this longitudinal study (N = 300)) the target behavior was to contribute, together with the other family members, in maintaining a positive family budget. Both pro-active (of concrete support) and foregoing behaviors were measured. To explain processes, we tested alternative models by using structural equation modeling with latent variables (LISREL 8): planned behavior theory (Ajzen, 1991); goal-directed behavior model (MGB, Bagozzi & Lee, 2002). MGB had the greatest explanatory and predictive power. A second-order factor of identification influenced we-intentions. Moreover, findings showed that behaviors were affected by a general second-order factor of intentionality representing individual and shared intentions to act in favor of the ingroup (family). Behavior was affected by a general second-order factor of intentionality representing individual and shared intentions to act in favor of the ingroup.
abstract + slide
we-intentions; shared intentions; attitude-behavior relationship; household behavior
English
Biennial Conference of Asian Association of Social Psychology
2013
Atti di 10th Biennial Conference of Asian Association of Social Psychology (AASP), Yogyakarta, Indonesia, August 21-24
2013
open
Mari, S., Bagozzi, R. (2013). Explanatory models of we-intentions: A longitudinal study in the Italian context.. In Atti di 10th Biennial Conference of Asian Association of Social Psychology (AASP), Yogyakarta, Indonesia, August 21-24.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/75586
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