0000000000617988

AUTHOR

Sheina Orbell

0000-0002-8665-3541

showing 4 related works from this author

The common sense model of illness self-regulation: a conceptual review and proposed extended model

2021

The common sense model of illness self-regulation outlines the dynamic processes by which individuals perceive, interpret, and respond to health threats and illness-related information. An extended version of the model is proposed, which specifies additional constructs and processes to explain how lay perceptions of health threats impact coping responses and health-related outcomes. The extended model provides detail on: (a) the mediating process by which individuals' illness representations relate to illness outcomes through adoption of coping procedures; (b) how illness representations are activated by presentation of health-threatening stimuli; (c) behavioral and treatment beliefs as det…

Self-regulation theoryCoping (psychology)030505 public healthProcess (engineering)media_common.quotation_subjectPsychological interventionCognitionSelf-Control03 medical and health sciencesPsychiatry and Mental healthClinical PsychologyPresentation0302 clinical medicineSocial cognitionIntervention (counseling)Adaptation PsychologicalHumans030212 general & internal medicine0305 other medical sciencePsychologyCognitive psychologymedia_commonHealth Psychology Review
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Psychometric properties of the stress control mindset measure in university students from Australia and the UK

2021

Abstract Introduction Beliefs about the consequences of stress, stress mindsets, are associated with health and performance outcomes under stress. This article reports the development and examination of the psychometric properties of a measure of stress mindset: The Stress Control Mindset Measure (SCMM). The measure is consistent with theory on mindsets about self‐attributes and conceptualizes stress mindset as the extent to which individuals endorse beliefs that stress can be enhancing. Methods The study adopted a correlational cross‐sectional survey design in two student samples. Undergraduate students from an Australian university (Sample 1, N = 218) and a UK university (Sample 2, N = 21…

Coping (psychology)PsychometricsUniversitiesConcurrent validityMindset050105 experimental psychologylcsh:RC321-57103 medical and health sciencesBehavioral Neurosciencestress0302 clinical medicinePsychologyHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesMeasurement invarianceStudentslcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryOriginal Researchimplicit theoriesopiskelijatmindsetselviytyminen05 social sciencesstress beliefsDiscriminant validityNeurosciencesAustraliaReproducibility of ResultsstressiUnited KingdompsykometriikkacopingCross-Sectional StudiesConvergent validityStress controlCognitive SciencesPsychologySocial psychologyIncremental validity030217 neurology & neurosurgeryBrain and Behavior
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Reflective and Impulsive Processes Underlying Saving Behavior and the Additional Roles of Self-Control and Habit

2018

Using a dual-process framework, the aim of this research was to investigate the associations between reflective and impulsive processes and saving behavior. Self-control and saving habit were tested as additional factors that potentially moderate the relationship between constructs representing reflective and impulsive processes and behavior, or exert indirect effects on behavior through these systems. A community sample of 594 participants completed measures of saving intention, buying impulsiveness, trait self-control, saving automaticity, and propensity to save money. A well-fitting variance-based structural equation model, goodness-of-fit index = 0.338, average path coefficient = .119, …

savingimpulsiivisuusitsehallintareflection (cognitive processes)self-controltottumuksetsäästäminenimpulsivityconsumer behaviourkuluttajakäyttäytyminenhabitsreflektio
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The common sense model of illness self-regulation : a conceptual review and proposed extended model

2021

The common sense model of illness self-regulation outlines the dynamic processes by which individuals perceive, interpret, and respond to health threats and illness-related information. An extended version of the model is proposed, which specifies additional constructs and processes to explain how lay perceptions of health threats impact coping responses and health-related outcomes. The extended model provides detail on: (a) the mediating process by which individuals’ illness representations relate to illness outcomes through adoption of coping procedures; (b) how illness representations are activated by presentation of health-threatening stimuli; (c) behavioral and treatment beliefs as det…

illness perceptionsparallel-processing modelterveyspsykologiaselviytyminenterveydentilasosiaalinen kognitioitsesääntelysocial cognitionself-regulation theory7.1 Individual care needscoping proceduresterveyskäyttäytyminenBehavioral and Social SciencePsychologyillness cognitionsairaudetMental healthterve järkiManagement of diseases and conditionsMind and Body
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