Brain Activity in Self- and Value-Related Regions in Response to Online Antismoking Messages Predicts Behavior Change
Penn collection
Degree type
Discipline
Subject
behavior change
smoking
brain-as-predictor
cognitive neuroscience
Biological Psychology
Cognition and Perception
Cognitive Neuroscience
Cognitive Psychology
Communication
Communication Technology and New Media
Graphic Communications
Health Communication
Health Psychology
Personality and Social Contexts
Social and Behavioral Sciences
Substance Abuse and Addiction
Funder
Grant number
License
Copyright date
Distributor
Related resources
Author
Contributor
Abstract
In this study, we combined approaches from media psychology and neuroscience to ask whether brain activity in response to online antismoking messages can predict smoking behavior change. In particular, we examined activity in subregions of the medial prefrontal cortex linked to self- and value-related processing, to test whether these neurocognitive processes play a role in message-consistent behavior change. We observed significant relationships between activity in both brain regions of interest and behavior change (such that higher activity predicted a larger reduction in smoking). Furthermore, activity in these brain regions predicted variance independent of traditional, theory-driven self-report metrics such as intention, self-efficacy, and risk perceptions. We propose that valuation is an additional cognitive process that should be investigated further as we search for a mechanistic explanation of the relationship between brain activity and media effects relevant to health behavior change.