Seminar
Skipping Your Workout, Again? Measuring and Understanding Time Inconsistency in Physical Activity
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SeriesPhD Lunch Seminars
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SpeakerDiarmaid O' Ceallaigh
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FieldEmpirical Microeconomics
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LocationOnline
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Date and time
November 18, 2021
16:00 - 17:00
Physical
activity is a textbook example of time inconsistency – people continually fail
to follow through on their ex-ante physical activity (PA) preferences and plans.
Think of failed New Year’s resolutions, gym memberships never used, and
workouts skipped. Given this, and the
major public health risks posed by physical inactivity, PA is a popular target
for behavioural interventions. However, despite a rich set of such
interventions, very few reach the goal of sustainably improving PA habits. An insufficient understanding of time
inconsistency in PA, and in particular its drivers, is likely an important factor
in this failure. Thus, a step back to the drawing board is warranted. We do
just that by providing empirical evidence on the prevalence and drivers of time
inconsistency in PA using a three-wave longitudinal online survey we ran with a
Dutch general population cohort (n = 3,168). We find that just over one third
of our sample is time inconsistent in PA, and that they fail to follow through
on just over a third of their ex-ante preferences and plans. We find no evidence that present bias, the
most popular explanation for time inconsistency in the economics literature, is
associated with time inconsistency. We do find evidence of an association of
time inconsistency with stress, willpower resources and temptation intensity –
three factors predicted by dual-self models of self-control to drive time
inconsistency. We also find evidence of a link between time inconsistency and dynamic
inconsistency in risk preferences, as well as trait self-control. In terms of studies of time inconsistency in PA,
this is the first to use such a large representative sample, and the first to go
beyond gym attendance by using a broad measure of PA. This study is also the
first to analyse the relationship of time inconsistency with a comprehensive
theory-guided list of possible drivers simultaneously.