scholarly journals Predictors of Hooking Up Sexual Behaviors and Emotional Reactions Among U.S. College Students

2011 ◽  
Vol 41 (5) ◽  
pp. 1219-1229 ◽  
Author(s):  
Melissa A. Lewis ◽  
Hollie Granato ◽  
Jessica A. Blayney ◽  
Ty W. Lostutter ◽  
Jason R. Kilmer
1975 ◽  
Vol 43 (3) ◽  
pp. 430-430 ◽  
Author(s):  
Victor C. Joe ◽  
Stanley Kostyla

2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (19) ◽  
pp. 8071
Author(s):  
Keith A. Puffer ◽  
Kris G. Pence

The first career interest inventory emerged in the late 1920s. The response options for the questions in the Strong Vocational Interest Blank included ‘like’ and ‘dislike.’ Both answers are emotional reactions. Regrettably, clients within the context of vocational counseling often regard negative feelings (e.g., dislikes) as inconsequential. Yet, negative emotionality can be adaptive and feasibly assist career decision-makers. In the literature on college students’ career development and emotional functioning, there is a paucity of information about how negative emotions advance the career decision-making process and how career decision-makers apply such knowledge. Hence, a sample of undergraduates (n = 256) was recruited to ascertain imaginable adaptive career decision-making benefits from negative affect. Employing a Mixed Methods-Grounded Theory methodology, the present study tabulated the negative emotional reactions of college students to vocations that were self- or computer-reported. In addition, their answers to two investigative questions about the selection of their negative emotions were analyzed. From the data, three negative meta-emotions emerged as reactions to participants’ reported occupations; four adaptive purposes for their selected negative affect were also discovered. A theoretical framework and applicative suggestions from the findings are presented.


Author(s):  
Amanda E Tanner ◽  
Kate M Guastaferro ◽  
Kelly L Rulison ◽  
David L Wyrick ◽  
Jeffrey J Milroy ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Using the multiphase optimization strategy (MOST), we previously developed and optimized an online behavioral intervention, itMatters, aimed at reducing the risk of sexually transmitted infections (STI) among first-year college students by targeting the intersection of alcohol use and sexual behaviors. Purpose We had two goals: (a) to evaluate the optimized itMatters intervention and (b) to determine whether the candidate sexual violence prevention (SVP) component (included at the request of participating universities) had a detectable effect and therefore should be added to create a new version of itMatters. We also describe the hybrid evaluation-optimization trial we conducted to accomplish these two goals in a single experiment. Methods First year college students (N = 3,098) at four universities in the USA were individually randomized in a hybrid evaluation-optimization 2 × 2 factorial trial. Data were analyzed using regression models, with pre-test outcome variables included as covariates in the models. Analyses were conducted separately with (a) immediate post-test scores and (b) 60-day follow-up scores as outcome variables. Results Experimental results indicated a significant effect of itMatters on targeted proximal outcomes (norms) and on one distal behavioral outcome (binge drinking). There were no significant effects on other behavioral outcomes, including the intersection of alcohol and sexual behaviors. In addition, there were mixed results (positive short-term effect; no effect at 60-day follow-up) of the SVP component on targeted proximal outcomes (students’ self-efficacy to reduce/prevent sexual violence and perceived effectiveness of protective behavioral strategies). Conclusions The hybrid evaluation-optimization trial enabled us to evaluate the individual and combined effectiveness of the optimized itMatters intervention and the SVP component in a single experiment, conserving resources and providing greatly improved efficiency. Trial Registration NCT04095065.


2016 ◽  
Vol 59 (1) ◽  
pp. 484-496
Author(s):  
Michael Hall ◽  
Ronald D. Williams ◽  
M. Allison Ford ◽  
Erin Murphy Cromeans ◽  
Randall J. Bergman
Keyword(s):  

1965 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 371-378 ◽  
Author(s):  
Warner R. Wilson

A questionnaire study of 101 college students related attitudes toward sexual intimacy to adjustment, measured by avowed happiness, and to religiosity. Religiosity correlated negatively with liberality and positively with happiness ( r = .33, p < .001). Other trends suggested a relation between unhappiness and several measures of liberality and conflict. The results support other studies in showing a small relationship between adjustment and adherence to traditional, conservative values. Data are discussed in terms of different theories of the role of value conflicts in the etiology of neurosis. Other findings show that in Hawaii Caucasians are more liberal than Orientals, males are more liberal than females, estimates of parental outlook are less liberal than S‘s ideal behavior, and S‘s own behavior is more liberal than his ideal (in boys only) and more conservative than what his peers are believed to accept (in girls only).


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