The relative effectiveness of altruistic and egocentric persuasion messages is an important research question when voluntary participation in medical research is the target behavior. In the US, most participants in Alzheimer's disease-focused research registries are White females, so increasing diversity in registry membership is a public health priority. We compared the association of two belief-based motivations - egocentric and altruistic - with intention to enroll in an Alzheimer's research registry using a nationally representative theory-based survey of US adults 50 years of age or older while oversampling Black and Hispanic respondents. With the exception of Hispanic females, there were few respondent differences between individual motivational belief items and the correlations between the altruistic and egocentric indices were similar with independent effects on intention: the effects of the two motivations on intention were not redundant. Further analysis demonstrated that a moderation model was not superior to an additive model when both altruistic and egocentric indices simultaneously predicted intention. Registry recruitment messages should use both altruistic and egocentric persuasive message components to increase enrollment into Alzheimer's research registries. Similar studies should determine if the additive effects of altruistic and egocentric motivations apply to other voluntary research participation contexts such as chronic diseases and mental illness.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13548506.2024.2430891 | DOI Listing |
Psychol Health Med
November 2024
Banner Alzheimer's Institute, Phoenix, AZ, USA.
The relative effectiveness of altruistic and egocentric persuasion messages is an important research question when voluntary participation in medical research is the target behavior. In the US, most participants in Alzheimer's disease-focused research registries are White females, so increasing diversity in registry membership is a public health priority. We compared the association of two belief-based motivations - egocentric and altruistic - with intention to enroll in an Alzheimer's research registry using a nationally representative theory-based survey of US adults 50 years of age or older while oversampling Black and Hispanic respondents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFederated human activity recognition (FHAR) has attracted much attention due to its great potential in privacy protection. Existing FHAR methods can collaboratively learn a global activity recognition model based on unimodal or multimodal data distributed on different local clients. However, it is still questionable whether existing methods can work well in a more common scenario where local data are from different modalities, e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Neurosci
October 2023
Biofaction KG, Vienna, Austria.
The growing field of neurotechnology (NT) is becoming more and more accessible in terms of reduced costs, increasing availability and reliability of materials, and ways to implant devices. As in other engineering fields such as bio-or information technology, there is a growing community of pioneering hackers who (self-)experiment with NT and develop novel applications. While most debates about NT, its goals and ethical ramifications are usually conducted by professionals in the field (neuroscientists, -engineers, -ethicists), little is known within these institutional frameworks about the motivations, goals and visions of neurohackers and how they view ethical ramifications of NT therapeutics vs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Sci
March 2023
Department of English Language and Literature, Faculty of Humanities, Kosar University of Bojnord, Bojnord 9453155168, Iran.
The second language acquisition (SLA) field has recently seen heightened interest in the study and application of positive psychology (PP). Emotion regulation is one of the concepts that has been stressed in PP. Several studies in PP have delved into how controlling one's emotions improves second language learning/teaching.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Consum Aff
May 2021
Department of Psychology Boston College Chestnut Hill Massachusetts USA.
Why do people give and help others in face of their own mortality salience? The existential struggle with the awareness of death impacts the gamut of human cognition, emotion, and behavior. This multi-method research (∑ = 1,219) explains the psychosocial impact of COVID-19-related mortality salience on altruism. Drawing from terror management theory, two studies tested death-thought accessibility, mortality salience, and anxiety buffer hypotheses.
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