Financial incentives can increase physical activity (PA), but differences in the immediacy of reward delivery and individual differences in delay discount rates (i.e., higher discount values associated with less tolerance for delayed rewards) may explain differential responding. The current study tested whether delay discount rate moderated the relative effectiveness of immediate financial rewards on increasing daily PA. Inactive, overweight adults (ages 18–60, N = 96) were randomized to receive either smaller, immediate goal-contingent rewards or larger, delayed rewards for participation. Delay discount rates were derived for those who completed the Monetary Choice Questionnaire (N = 85). Linear mixed models tested interactions between dis...
Participants (N = 28) chose between smaller, immediate and larger, delayed hypothetical monetary amo...
Steep delay discounting is characterized by a preference for small immediate outcomes relative to la...
Elevated delay discounting, in which delayed rewards quickly lose value as a function of time, is as...
In everyday decision-making, individuals make trade-offs between short-term and long-term benefits o...
When given the choice between $100 today and $110 in 1 week, certain people are more likely to choos...
Exercise is an important health behavior. Expressed reasons for participation are often delayed outc...
Delay discounting refers to the tendency of individuals to subjectively devalue rewards that are to ...
Abstract Background Emerging interventions that rely on and harness variability in behavior to adapt...
Delay discounting and physical exercise tend to be independently explored, despite the increasing ro...
Deciding to exercise requires trade-offs between immediate and delayed benefits. These momentary dec...
Acceptance and Commitment Training (ACT) is a psychological intervention that combines acceptance an...
Delay discounting reflects how rapidly a reward loses perceived value based on the delay to receivin...
Interventions to promote activity observe limited and short-lived success. Financial incentives may ...
Would you prefer $75 now or $100 in the future? What about an unhealthy dessert now or good health i...
abstract: Background Emerging interventions that rely on and harness variability in behavior to adap...
Participants (N = 28) chose between smaller, immediate and larger, delayed hypothetical monetary amo...
Steep delay discounting is characterized by a preference for small immediate outcomes relative to la...
Elevated delay discounting, in which delayed rewards quickly lose value as a function of time, is as...
In everyday decision-making, individuals make trade-offs between short-term and long-term benefits o...
When given the choice between $100 today and $110 in 1 week, certain people are more likely to choos...
Exercise is an important health behavior. Expressed reasons for participation are often delayed outc...
Delay discounting refers to the tendency of individuals to subjectively devalue rewards that are to ...
Abstract Background Emerging interventions that rely on and harness variability in behavior to adapt...
Delay discounting and physical exercise tend to be independently explored, despite the increasing ro...
Deciding to exercise requires trade-offs between immediate and delayed benefits. These momentary dec...
Acceptance and Commitment Training (ACT) is a psychological intervention that combines acceptance an...
Delay discounting reflects how rapidly a reward loses perceived value based on the delay to receivin...
Interventions to promote activity observe limited and short-lived success. Financial incentives may ...
Would you prefer $75 now or $100 in the future? What about an unhealthy dessert now or good health i...
abstract: Background Emerging interventions that rely on and harness variability in behavior to adap...
Participants (N = 28) chose between smaller, immediate and larger, delayed hypothetical monetary amo...
Steep delay discounting is characterized by a preference for small immediate outcomes relative to la...
Elevated delay discounting, in which delayed rewards quickly lose value as a function of time, is as...