Neighborhood walkability and walking behavior: the moderating role of action orientation

J Phys Act Health. 2013 May;10(4):515-22. doi: 10.1123/jpah.10.4.515. Epub 2012 Sep 12.

Abstract

Background: In promoting physical activity, it is important to gain insight into environmental factors that facilitate or hinder physical activity and factors that may influence this environment-behavior relationship. As the personality factor of action orientation reflects an individual's capacity to regulate behavior it may act as a moderator in the environment-behavior relationship. The current study addressed the relationship between neighborhood walkability and walking behavior and the influence of action orientation on this relationship.

Methods: Three hundred and forty-seven Dutch inhabitants [mean age 43.1 (SD 17.1)] completed a web based questionnaire assessing demographic variables, neighborhood walkability (Neighborhood Environment Walkability Scale), variables of the Theory of Planned Behavior, action orientation, and walking behavior.

Results: The results show that high levels of neighborhood walkability are positively associated with walking behavior and that this influence is largely unmediated by cognitive processes. A positive influence of neighborhood walkability on walking behavior was identified in the action-oriented subpopulation, whereas in the state-oriented part of the population, this influence was absent.

Conclusions: The findings suggest that the influence of neighborhood environment on walking behavior has a relatively large unconscious, automatic component. In addition, the results suggest that the walkability-walking relationship is moderated by action orientation.

MeSH terms

  • Body Mass Index
  • Environment Design* / statistics & numerical data
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Netherlands / epidemiology
  • Personality
  • Psychological Tests
  • Residence Characteristics
  • Surveys and Questionnaires
  • Walking / psychology
  • Walking / statistics & numerical data*