Based on data drawn from a random-digit-dial probability sample of adults in a major American metropolitan area, this study supports the perspective that self-efficacy is domain specific and that outcome efficacy is distinct from self-efficacy. Data were collected by telephone interviewers which were administered by telephone interviews to 525 respondents with a 64.1% completion rate. Sample demographic summary statistics closely approximated population parameters. Five orthogonal factors emerged from analysis of self-efficacy and outcome efficacy items. The five factors represented self-efficacy with regard to nutrition, medical care, exercise, and with a set of neutral control items relating to political behavior, and with the outcome efficacy items for each behavioral domain. Hypotheses relating scores for each factor with a number of behavioral indicators were tested. Only four of 125 correlations failed to support hypothesized relationships, lending evidence for the discriminant validity of the self-efficacy dimensions.
Bárbara Riegel, Claudio Barbaranelli, Kristen A. Sethares, Marguerite Daus, Debra K. Moser, Jennifer Miller, Christine Haedtke, Jodi L. Feinberg, Solim Lee, Anna Strömberg, Tiny Jaarsma
Bárbara Riegel, Claudio Barbaranelli, Kristen A. Sethares, Marguerite Daus, Debra K. Moser, Jennifer Miller, Christine Haedtke, Jodi L. Feinberg, Solim Lee, Anna Strömberg, Tiny Jaarsma
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