Financial motivation undermines potential enjoyment in an intensive diet and activity intervention.

Arlen C Moller, Joanna Buscemi, H Gene McFadden, Donald Hedeker, Bonnie Spring
Author Information
  1. Arlen C Moller: Department of Psychology, Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, IL, USA, amoller@iit.edu.

Abstract

The use of material incentives in healthy lifestyle interventions is becoming widespread. However, self-determination theory (SDT) posits that when material incentives are perceived as controlling, they undermine intrinsic motivation. We analyzed data from the Make Better Choices trial-a trial testing strategies for improving four risk behaviors: low fruit-vegetable intake, high saturated fat intake, low physical activity, and high sedentary activity. At baseline, participants reported the degree to which financial incentives were an important motivator (financial motivation); self-reported enjoyment of each behavior was assessed before and after the 3-week incentivization phase. Consistent with SDT, after controlling for general motivation and group assignment, lower financial motivation predicted more adaptive changes in enjoyment. Whereas participants low in financial motivation experienced adaptive changes, adaptive changes were suppressed among those high in financial motivation.

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Grants

  1. F31 MH070107/NIMH NIH HHS
  2. P30 CA060553/NCI NIH HHS
  3. R01 HL075451/NHLBI NIH HHS
  4. HL075451/NHLBI NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Adult
Feeding Behavior
Female
Fruit
Health Promotion
Humans
Male
Motivation
Motor Activity
Personal Autonomy
Personal Satisfaction
Reward
Risk Reduction Behavior
Vegetables

Word Cloud

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