Physical activity theories have almost exclusively focused on conscious
regulatory processes such as plans, beliefs, and expected value. The aim
of this review was to aggregate the burgeoning evidence showing that
physical activity is also partially determined by non-conscious processes
(e.g., habits, automatic associations, priming effects). A systematic search
was conducted and study characteristics, design, measures, effect size of
the principle summary measures, and main conclusions of 52 studies
were extracted by two independent coders. The findings support that
habitual regulatory processes measured via self-report are directly
associated with physical activity beyond conscious processes, and that
there is likely interdependency between habit strength and intentions.
Response latency measures of automatic associations with physical
activity were widely disparate, precluding conclusions about specific
effects. A small body of evidence demonstrated a variety of priming
effects on physical activity. Overall, it is evident that physical activity is
partially regulated by non-conscious processes, but there remain many
unanswered questions for this area of research. Future research should
refine the conceptualisation and measurement of non-conscious
regulatory processes and determine how to harness them to promote
physical activity.
Funding
Category 1 - Australian Competitive Grants (this includes ARC, NHMRC)