An Integrated Dual‐Process Model for Coping Behavior

Stress management interventions have traditionally aimed to change coping behavior with little attention to mechanisms that drive behavior change. We sought to test an integrated dual-process model, accounting for reasoned and automatic processes, for predicting problem-focused coping behavior. The study adopted a two-wave prospective correlational design with a 1-week follow-up. University students aged 17–25 (N = 272) completed survey measures online. At Time 1, participants completed self-report measures of attitude, subjective norm, perceived behavioral control, intention, behavioral automaticity, and past problem-focused coping behavior. At Time 2, participants completed follow-up measures of behavioral automaticity and problem-focused coping behavior. Structural equation modelling testing the hypothesized dual-process model exhibited a good fit to the data, accounting for 50.0% and 45.4% of the variance in intentions and problem-focused coping behavior, respectively. Attitude, subjective norm, perceived behavioral control, and past behavior directly predicted intention. Intention, past behavior, and behavioral automaticity directly predicted problem-focused coping behavior. Past behavior also indirectly predicted problem-focused coping behavior via behavioral automaticity. Results suggest that problem-focused coping behavior tends to be regulated by reasoned psychological processes, and more strongly by automatic psychological processes. Future research aiming to increase problem-focused coping should utilize behavior change methods known to influence these processes.

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