Motivational Readiness to Change: Effects of Negative Drinking Outcome Expectancies

2006 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erin M. Alleva ◽  
Kenneth E. Hart
2015 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 59-75 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fran Longstaff ◽  
Nick Heather ◽  
Susan Allsop ◽  
Elizabeth Partington ◽  
Mark Jankowski ◽  
...  

This study examined whether students engaged in university sport have different drinking outcome expectancies and normative beliefs than students who are not engaged in university sport. A cross-sectional survey of university students in England in 2008–2009 was undertaken. A questionnaire battery, including the Drinking Expectancies Questionnaire (DEQ) and a measure of normative beliefs, was completed by 770 students from seven universities across England. Responses from 638 students who were not abstaining from alcohol were analyzed. Students engaged in university sport have significantly higher drinking expectancies of assertion compared with students not engaged in university sport. Moreover, students engaged in university sport consistently report higher personal alcohol consumption and higher perceptions of consumption in those around them than students not engaged in university sport. Both assertion and the perception that students around them drink heavily provide only a partial explanation for why students engaged in university sport drink more than those not engaged in university sport. Further research is required to identify the reasons for heavy drinking among students involved in university sport in England.


Addiction ◽  
1988 ◽  
Vol 83 (5) ◽  
pp. 561-566 ◽  
Author(s):  
GERARD J. CONNORS ◽  
TIMOTHY J. O'FARRELL ◽  
MARJORIE A. PELCOVITS

2016 ◽  
Vol 34 (3) ◽  
pp. 599-620 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adam D. LaMotte ◽  
Nancy A. Remington ◽  
Casey Rezac ◽  
Christopher M. Murphy

This study investigated positive and negative reactions and conciliatory behaviors after perpetration of intimate partner violence (IPV). The goals were to examine the rates of these reactions and their associations with key attitudinal and personality factors. During program intake at a community agency, 172 partner violent men completed assessments of positive reactions (e.g., feeling justified) and negative reactions (e.g., feeling ashamed) after IPV, conciliatory behaviors after IPV (e.g., buying flowers for the partner), frequency of physical assault and abuse perpetration, and motivational readiness to change. In addition, a subset of participants ( n = 64-71) completed assessments of outcome expectancies of IPV and borderline, antisocial, and psychopathic personality characteristics. The vast majority of participants (89.8%) reported negative reaction(s) after IPV; 32.7% reported positive reaction(s), and 67.5% reported conciliatory behavior(s). Positive reactions after IPV were associated with positive outcome expectancies of IPV, more frequent abuse perpetration, and antisocial features. Negative reactions after IPV were associated with greater motivation to change, more frequent abuse perpetration, and borderline features, and were inversely linked to psychopathic traits. Conciliatory behaviors were associated with motivation to change, borderline characteristics, and lower levels of psychopathic traits. Cognitive, emotional, and behavioral reactions to IPV may be important for stimulating clinical discussion of motivations and barriers to change, and can inform the functional analysis of IPV.


2011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tyler M. Carey ◽  
Kenneth E. Hart ◽  
Phillip A. Ianni ◽  
Amanda Robinson ◽  
Stephen Hibbard

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