Corina Berli
Columbia University
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Featured researches published by Corina Berli.
Psychology & Health | 2014
Corina Berli; Philipp Loretini; Theda Radtke; Rainer Hornung; Urte Scholz
Objective: Compensatory health beliefs (CHBs), defined as beliefs that healthy behaviours can compensate for unhealthy behaviours, may be one possible factor hindering people in adopting a healthier lifestyle. This study examined the contribution of CHBs to the prediction of adolescents’ physical activity within the theoretical framework of the Health Action Process Approach (HAPA). Design: The study followed a prospective survey design with assessments at baseline (T1) and two weeks later (T2). Method: Questionnaire data on physical activity, HAPA variables and CHBs were obtained twice from 430 adolescents of four different Swiss schools. Multilevel modelling was applied. Results: CHBs added significantly to the prediction of intentions and change in intentions, in that higher CHBs were associated with lower intentions to be physically active at T2 and a reduction in intentions from T1 to T2. No effect of CHBs emerged for the prediction of self-reported levels of physical activity at T2 and change in physical activity from T1 to T2. Conclusion: Findings emphasise the relevance of examining CHBs in the context of an established health behaviour change model and suggest that CHBs are of particular importance in the process of intention formation.
Families, Systems, & Health | 2013
Urte Scholz; Corina Berli; Philippe Goldammer; Janina Lüscher; Rainer Hornung; Nina Knoll
A common form of social regulation of an individuals health behavior is social control. The contextual model of social control assumes that higher relationship quality goes along with more beneficial effects of social control on health behavior. This study examined potential differential moderating effects of different dimensions of relationship quality on the associations between positive and negative social control and smoking behavior and hiding smoking. The sample consisted of 144 smokers (n = 72 women; mean age = 31.78, SD = 10.04) with a nonsmoking partner. Positive and negative social control, dimensions of relationship quality consensus, cohesion and satisfaction, numbers of cigarettes smoked (NCS), hiding smoking (HS), and control variables were assessed at baseline. Four weeks later NCS and HS were assessed again. Only for smokers with high consensus, but not cohesion and satisfaction, a negative association between positive control and NCS emerged. Moreover, smokers with high consensus tended to report more HS when being positively and negatively socially controlled. This also emerged for cohesion and positive control. Satisfaction with the relationship did not display any interaction effects. This studys results emphasize the importance of differentiating not only between positive and negative social control but also between different dimensions of relationship quality in order to gain a comprehensive understanding of the dynamics in romantic dyads with regard to social regulation of behavioral change.
Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin | 2018
Corina Berli; Niall Bolger; Patrick E. Shrout; Gertraud Stadler; Urte Scholz
Little is known about how couples’ social support facilitates the pursuit of important goals in daily life. Using an interpersonal perspective, we examined the effects of support provision and receipt on same-day physical activity, and studied the role of partners’ joint engagement in activities. One hundred nineteen heterosexual couples reported on target persons’ received and partners’ provided support across 28 diary days, yielding 2,854 valid days. A dyadic report on couples’ joint engagement was obtained from a subset of 88 couples. Target persons’ daily activity was objectively assessed via accelerometers. On days with high versus low levels of provided support, target persons’ activity was 25 min higher. Support receipt mediated 20% of this effect. Joint engagement accounted for around half of the effects of provided and received support. Support provision is uniquely linked to goal implementation in everyday life. Joint engagement in activities may be one explanation for how support is facilitated.
Applied Psychology: Health and Well-being | 2017
Janina Lüscher; Corina Berli; Urte Scholz
BACKGROUND Withdrawing effort and commitment from important goals (i.e. goal disengagement) has been discussed as an effective aspect of goal adaption. However, studies have focused especially on between-person differences. The present studies aimed to investigate within-person differences in goal disengagement within a dyadic context of romantic couples. Across two different health behaviors, we specifically tested whether goal disengagement would be associated with better well-being, but lower goal achievement in everyday life. METHODS In two dyadic daily diary studies (Study 1: 61 overweight couples aiming to become physically active; Study 2: 83 dual-smoker couples aiming to quit smoking), both partners independently reported on goal disengagement, positive and negative affect. Behavioral goal achievement was measured via accelerometer (Study 1) and self-report (Study 2). RESULTS Analyses based on the Actor-Partner Interdependence Model revealed that across both studies, ones own goal disengagement was related to lower well-being and a lower likelihood for goal achievement on a daily level (actor effects). Only in Study 1 were partner effects on negative affect and goal achievement found. CONCLUSIONS In daily life, goal disengagement may not be as adaptive for well-being and goal achievement in health behavior change. Dyadic associations were not consistent, and might be more context-sensitive.
Social Science & Medicine | 2016
Corina Berli; Gertraud Stadler; Jennifer Inauen; Urte Scholz
BMC Public Health | 2014
Urte Scholz; Corina Berli
Zeitschrift für Gesundheitspsychologie | 2014
Janina Lüscher; Sibylle Ochsner; Corina Berli; Nina Knoll; Gertraud Stadler; Rainer Hornung; Urte Scholz
Journal of Behavioral Medicine | 2015
Corina Berli; Sibylle Ochsner; Gertraud Stadler; Nina Knoll; Rainer Hornung; Urte Scholz
Annals of Behavioral Medicine | 2017
Corina Berli; Gertraud Stadler; Patrick E. Shrout; Niall Bolger; Urte Scholz
Psychology of Sport and Exercise | 2017
Pamela Rackow; Corina Berli; Janina Lüscher; Aleksandra Luszczynska; Urte Scholz