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Published in: Annals of Behavioral Medicine 1/2008

01-02-2008 | Presidential Address

The Importance of Context in Understanding Behavior and Promoting Health

Author: Edwin B. Fisher, Ph.D.

Published in: Annals of Behavioral Medicine | Issue 1/2008

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Abstract

Behavior, the roles of behavior in health, health promotion, health, quality of life, and death are all context-dependent. This paper begins with a review of behavioral and ecological models, emphasizing their shared emphasis on context. It then turns to genetics and the importance of contexts in understanding genetic influences. Jumping from genes to geography, it examines how spatial analysis provides both a model and framework for considering contextual influence. Continuing with analytic models, it returns to genetics, and considers how it provide models for integrating our understanding of broad social and community influences. The paper extends this thinking through multilevel analysis and proposes “analytic multilevel designs” as a way of studying “context focused interventions” (as opposed to context independent interventions for which conventional experimental designs are often well-suited). It closes with reflections on ways in which we cultivate and extend our knowledge base and on the intellectual contexts of positivism and postmodernism that surround behavioral and ecological thinking.
Footnotes
1
Shakespeare, Julius Caesar, Act 1, Scene 2.
 
2
Luke, Chapter 17, verse 6.
 
3
It is of historical interest that behaviorism here shares the “Projective Hypothesis” associated with psychoanalytic approaches, that much is revealed in response to ambiguous stimuli. However, from a behavioral perspective, what is revealed are the current perspectives and tendencies that reflect past learning and experience. From an analytic perspective, what is revealed are the psychodynamics of the individual, shaped largely by the critical experiences and relationships of childhood and youth emphasized in those perspectives.
 
4
Now at Graduate Institute of Public Health, Taipei Medical University, Taiwan.
 
5
If you ever get there, please send postcard to Ed Fisher, Box 7440, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27599.
 
6
“In DNA Era, New Worries about Prejudice,” New York Times, 11 November, 2007, pp. 1, 24.
 
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Metadata
Title
The Importance of Context in Understanding Behavior and Promoting Health
Author
Edwin B. Fisher, Ph.D.
Publication date
01-02-2008
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Annals of Behavioral Medicine / Issue 1/2008
Print ISSN: 0883-6612
Electronic ISSN: 1532-4796
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12160-007-9001-z

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