F
Falko F. Sniehotta
Researcher at Newcastle University
Publications - 285
Citations - 19598
Falko F. Sniehotta is an academic researcher from Newcastle University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Psychological intervention & Randomized controlled trial. The author has an hindex of 60, co-authored 260 publications receiving 16194 citations. Previous affiliations of Falko F. Sniehotta include Free University of Berlin & University of Cambridge.
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Journal ArticleDOI
A refined taxonomy of behaviour change techniques to help people change their physical activity and healthy eating behaviours: the CALO-RE taxonomy.
Susan Michie,Stefanie Ashford,Falko F. Sniehotta,Stephan U Dombrowski,Alex Bishop,David P. French +5 more
TL;DR: This taxonomy can be used to improve the specification of interventions in published reports, thus improving replication, implementation and evidence syntheses and will strengthen the scientific study of behaviour change and intervention development.
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Bridging the intention–behaviour gap: Planning, self-efficacy, and action control in the adoption and maintenance of physical exercise
TL;DR: In this paper, a longitudinal sample of 307 cardiac rehabilitation patients who were encouraged to adopt or maintain regular exercise was examined and three factors (planning, maintenance self-efficacy, and action control) served to mediate between earlier exercise intentions and later physical activity, each making a unique contribution.
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Primary care-led weight management for remission of type 2 diabetes (DiRECT): an open-label, cluster-randomised trial
Michael E. J. Lean,Wilma S Leslie,Alison C. Barnes,Naomi Brosnahan,George Thom,Louise McCombie,Carl Peters,Sviatlana Zhyzhneuskaya,Ahmad Al-Mrabeh,Kieren G. Hollingsworth,Angela M. Rodrigues,Lucia Rehackova,Ashley J. Adamson,Falko F. Sniehotta,John C. Mathers,H. M. Ross,Yvonne McIlvenna,Renae J. Stefanetti,Michael I. Trenell,Paul Welsh,Sharon Kean,Ian Ford,Alex McConnachie,Naveed Sattar,Roy Taylor +24 more
TL;DR: The findings show that, at 12 months, almost half of participants achieved remission to a non-diabetic state and off antidiabetic medications, from baseline to 12 months.
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Time to retire the theory of planned behaviour
TL;DR: The Theory of Planned Behaviour (TPB; Ajzen...
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Action planning and coping planning for long-term lifestyle change: Theory and assessment
TL;DR: Action planning and coping planning for physical exercise were examined in a longitudinal study with 352 cardiac patients, and it was found that they operated differently in the behavioural change process.