2011
DOI: 10.1080/08870446.2011.572260
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The role of context and timeframe in moderating relationships within the theory of planned behaviour

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Cited by 29 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…Certainly, research has demonstrated that context and normative beliefs have an interactive effect on con sumption. Cooke and French (2011) found that sub jective norms of participants in a bar were more predictive of their intentions to binge drink, whereas the subjective norms of participants in a library were less predictive of intentions to binge drink. There are therefore indications, particularly from in vivo research, that one's present context can impact norma tive beliefs.…”
Section: Measures O F In Vivo Alcohol-related Cognitionsmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…Certainly, research has demonstrated that context and normative beliefs have an interactive effect on con sumption. Cooke and French (2011) found that sub jective norms of participants in a bar were more predictive of their intentions to binge drink, whereas the subjective norms of participants in a library were less predictive of intentions to binge drink. There are therefore indications, particularly from in vivo research, that one's present context can impact norma tive beliefs.…”
Section: Measures O F In Vivo Alcohol-related Cognitionsmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…Where studies reported separate statistical tests for more than one sample, the correlation coefficient from each sample was used as the unit of analysis (e.g., Rise & Wilhelmsen, 1998 ). Where studies had reported correlations for multiple measures of a single TPB construct, as opposed to a composite variable (e.g., Cooke & French, 2011 ), we used the mean of the reported correlation coefficients. Hagger, Lonsdale, Hein, et al ( 2012 ) reported results from the same sample on two occasions.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Concerns around inconsistent use of the term have prompted encouragement of alternative labels for patterns of high single‐session alcohol consumption (e.g., ‘heavy episodic drinking’; see Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs, 2011 ). We use the term ‘binge drinking’ to locate our study within a vein of recent psychological research into this phenomenon (e.g., Cooke & French, 2011 ; Cooke, French, & Sniehotta, 2010 ; French & Cooke, 2010 ; Norman, 2011 ; Norman, Armitage, & Quigley, 2007 ). Our recruitment advertisement was initially circulated in England, and so ‘binge drinking’ was conceptualized using the >8/>6 unit cut off.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%