Influence of high versus low readability level of written health information on self-efficacy: A randomized controlled study of the processing fluency effect

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Abstract

We investigated the relationship of processing fluency of written information about exercise to participants’ perceived interest, safety, self-efficacy, outcome expectation, and behavioral intention regarding the exercise. We randomly assigned 400 men and women aged 40–69 years to control or intervention conditions. Perceived self-efficacy of performing the exercise in the intervention group (i.e. easy to read) was significantly higher than that in the control group (i.e. difficult to read) (p = 0.04). Easy-to-read written health information may be important not only for making written health information comprehensible but also for increasing readers’ self-efficacy for adopting health-related behaviors.

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Okuhara, T., Ishikawa, H., Ueno, H., Okada, H., Kato, M., & Kiuchi, T. (2020). Influence of high versus low readability level of written health information on self-efficacy: A randomized controlled study of the processing fluency effect. Health Psychology Open, 7(1). https://doi.org/10.1177/2055102920905627

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