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Psychometric Properties of the Self-Efficacy for Exercise Questionnaire in a Diverse Sample of Men and Women
Author(s) -
Sara Wilcox,
Patricia A. Sharpe,
Brent Hutto,
Michelle L. Granner
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
journal of physical activity and health
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.787
H-Index - 73
eISSN - 1543-5474
pISSN - 1543-3080
DOI - 10.1123/jpah.2.3.285
Subject(s) - exploratory factor analysis , internal consistency , self efficacy , construct validity , psychology , convergent validity , clinical psychology , gerontology , psychometrics , construct (python library) , african american , analysis of variance , medicine , physical activity , demography , physical therapy , social psychology , sociology , ethnology , computer science , history , programming language
Background: Self-efficacy is a consistent correlate of physical activity, but most self-efficacy measures have not been validated in diverse populations. This study examined the construct, criterion-related, and convergent validity and internal consistency of the Self-Efficacy for Exercise Questionnaire. Methods: African American and Caucasian adults (N = 1919) from two adjacent counties in South Carolina were identified through a list-assisted random digit-dialed telephone survey. Psychometric properties of the measure were assessed by gender, race, age, education, and body weight subgroups. Results: Across all subgroups, a single-factor solution explained 93 to 98% of the common variance in an exploratory factor analysis, and all 14 items had factor loadings exceeding 0.40. Higher exercise self-efficacy was significantly associated with greater physical activity, younger age, male gender, higher education, and lower body weight, as predicted. Internal consistency was high for all subgroups (α = 0.90 to ...

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