Abstract
The formation of interpersonal intentions has been a central theme in socialpsychological research for over twenty years. Existing psychological models propose that attitudes, social norms, and moral obligations often combine to form intentions. These models will be utilized to develop individual indexes of the relative influence of attitudes, norms, and moral obligations in forming intentions. These indexes will then be correlated with measures of locus of control, selfmonitoring, and individualism-collectivism in order to explore the extent to which personal and cultural factors influence the intention-formation process.