Priming the pump: Alcohol expectancy activation increases drinking behavior

1992 ◽  
Vol 42 (2) ◽  
pp. 378
2015 ◽  
Vol 32 (15) ◽  
pp. 2298-2322 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kimberly A. Tyler ◽  
Rachel M. Schmitz ◽  
Scott A. Adams

College students have high rates of heavy drinking, and this dangerous behavior is strongly linked to sexual victimization. Although research has examined risk factors for sexual assault, few studies have simultaneously studied the various pathways through which risks may affect sexual assault and how these pathways may be uniquely different among females and males. As such, the current study uses path analyses to examine whether alcohol expectancies mediate the relationship between social factors (e.g., hooking up, amount friends drink) and drinking behavior and experiencing sexual victimization, and whether drinking behavior mediates the relationship between alcohol expectancies and sexual victimization among a college sample of 704 males and females from a large Midwestern university. For both females and males, sexual victimization was positively associated with child sexual abuse, hooking up more often, and heavier drinking, whereas greater alcohol expectancies were associated with sexual victimization only for females. Several mediating pathways were found for both females and males. Gender comparisons revealed that some of the pathways to sexual victimization such as hooking up, amount friends drink, and housing type operated differently for females and males.


2009 ◽  
Vol 23 (2) ◽  
pp. 329-333 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ronald S. Friedman ◽  
Denis M. McCarthy ◽  
Sarah L. Pedersen ◽  
Joshua A. Hicks

2016 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 357-364 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kimberly A. Tyler ◽  
Rachel M. Schmitz ◽  
Scott A. Adams ◽  
Leslie Gordon Simons

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeffery D Wardell ◽  
Jennifer P Read ◽  
John Joseph Curtin ◽  
Jennifer E Merrill

Background—Implicit positive alcohol expectancy (PAEs) processes are thought to respond phasically to external and internal stimuli – including mood states – and so they may exert powerful proximal influences over drinking behavior. Although social learning theory contends that mood states activate mood-congruent implicit PAEs, which in turn lead to alcohol use, there is a dearth of experimental research examining this mediation model relative to observable drinking. Moreover, an expectancy theory perspective might suggest that, rather than influencing PAEs directly, mood may moderate the association between PAEs and drinking. To test these models, the present study examined the role of mood in the association between implicitly measured PAEprocesses (i.e., latency to endorse PAEs) and immediate alcohol consumption in the laboratory. Gender differences in these processes also were examined.Method—College students (N=146) were exposed to either a positive, negative, or neutral mood induction procedure, completed a computerized PAE reaction time (RT) task, and subsequently consumed alcohol ad libitum.Results—The mood manipulation had no direct effects on drinking in the lab, making the mediation hypothesis irrelevant. Instead, gender and mood condition moderated the association between RT to endorse PAEs and drinking in the lab. For males, RT to tension reduction PAEs was a stronger predictor of volume of beer consumed and peak BAC in the context of general arousal (i.e., positive and negative mood) relative to neutral mood. RT to PAEs did not predict drinking in the lab for females.Conclusions—The results show that PAE processes are important determinants of immediate drinking behavior in men, suggesting that biased attention to mood-relevant PAEs – as indicated by longer RTs – predicts greater alcohol consumption in the appropriate mood context. The findings also highlight the need to consider gender differences in PAE processes. This study underscores the need for interventions that target automatic cognitive processes related to alcohol use.


2002 ◽  
Vol 23 (2) ◽  
pp. 205-216 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ralf Demmel ◽  
Jutta Hagen

Zusammenfassung: Gegenstand der vorliegenden Arbeit ist die Entwicklung eines ökonomischen Verfahrens zur Erfassung von Alkoholwirkungserwartungen. An einer Stichprobe von insgesamt 714 Erwachsenen - bzw. verschiedenen Teilstichproben - wurden erstmals Faktorenstruktur, psychometrische Eigenschaften und Validität einer deutschsprachigen Version des Alcohol Expectancy Questionnaire (AEQ) überprüft. Die Faktorenstruktur der deutschsprachigen Version entspricht nicht der des amerikanischen Originalinstruments. Eine zweifaktorielle Lösung lässt sich in Übereinstimmung mit den Annahmen psychologischer Modelle der Genese von Alkoholabhängigkeit und -missbrauch interpretieren: Faktor 1 (Erleichterung des Sozialkontakts) beschreibt eine Zunahme sozialer Kompetenz, Faktor 2 (Spannungsreduktion und Affektregulation) die Erwartung intrapsychischer Effekte. Zusammenhänge zwischen Konsummaßen und den AEQ-Summenwerten lassen sich als erste Hinweise auf die Validität des Verfahrens interpretieren.


1998 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeannette M. Johansson ◽  
Evan R. Harrington
Keyword(s):  

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