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Amelie U. Wiedemann
Researcher at Free University of Berlin
Publications - 36
Citations - 1545
Amelie U. Wiedemann is an academic researcher from Free University of Berlin. The author has contributed to research in topics: Behavior change & Moderated mediation. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 35 publications receiving 1407 citations. Previous affiliations of Amelie U. Wiedemann include Charité.
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Disentangling the relation between intentions, planning, and behaviour: A moderated mediation analysis
TL;DR: Results from both studies suggest that levels of intentions moderate the mediation process: the strength of the mediated effect increased along with levels of Intentions, and implications for theory advancement and intervention development are discussed.
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Self-efficacy moderates the mediation of intentions into behavior via plans.
TL;DR: For plans to mediate the intention-behavior relation, people must hold sufficiently high levels of self-efficacy: if they lack self- efficacy, planning may be in vain.
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Adherence to a daily flossing regimen in university students : effects of planning when, where, how and what to do in the face of barriers
TL;DR: The results suggest targeting planning in interventions to increase compliance with flossing recommendations, and implications for such interventions are discussed.
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Changes in Intentions, Planning, and Self-efficacy Predict Changes in Behaviors An Application of Latent True Change Modeling
Tabea Reuter,Jochen P. Ziegelmann,Amelie U. Wiedemann,Christian Geiser,Sonia Lippke,Benjamin Schüz,Ralf Schwarzer +6 more
TL;DR: Similar prediction patterns were found for physical activity as well as fruit and vegetable intake: changes in intention and self-efficacy predicted changes in planning, which in turn corresponded to changes in behavior.
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Predicting transitions from preintentional, intentional and actional stages of change
TL;DR: Progression from preintention to intention was predicted by action planning, whereas coping planning and self-efficacy predicted transitions from intention, and regression from action was predicted from action, which supports the distinction of three common stages.