The present study examines the role of positive and negative consequences and peer influence as proximal and contextual variables that influence drinking in college students. Data from a sample of 1482 students who completed the CORE survey in 2006 and 2007 were utilized to test three models predicting the likelihood of alcohol use in the 30 days prior to survey completion. The final model reflected the best fit of the data and indicated that both positive and negative consequences were positively associated with a greater likelihood of drinking while freshman standing and being a racial and ethnic minority were negatively associated. Two variables assessing the influence of peer pressure were also significant in the final model, suggesting...
Objective: Risk-taking behavior (e.g., alcohol abuse, tobacco usage, misuse of prescription medicati...
Alcohol use is a pervasive problem among college students, with 59% of full-time students reporting ...
Objective The present study examines the relationships among reasons for drinking, alcohol consumpti...
The present study examines the role of positive and negative consequences and peer influence as prox...
Objective: Social influences are among the most robust predictors of adolescent substance use and mi...
Peer pressure is consistently implicated in the excessive drinking of college students. However, bot...
College students are usually in their late adolescence and young adulthood. In this stage of develop...
Utilizing longitudinal data on 345 high school students, this study investigates the impact that pee...
This study examined the relationship between alcohol consumption patterns and the felt perception of...
The social norms approach to college drinking suggests that students misperceive the drinking behavi...
Peer crowd affiliation (PCA) has been linked to alcohol use in adolescents, with patterns varying by...
The purpose of this study is to assess a hypothesized model of the influences of alcohol-related exp...
Past research has shown that college students consistently misperceive the amount of alcohol that th...
Respondents in the current study were 183 first-year undergraduate students at the University of Win...
Alcohol abuse among college students comes with consequences that can be academic, social, emotional...
Objective: Risk-taking behavior (e.g., alcohol abuse, tobacco usage, misuse of prescription medicati...
Alcohol use is a pervasive problem among college students, with 59% of full-time students reporting ...
Objective The present study examines the relationships among reasons for drinking, alcohol consumpti...
The present study examines the role of positive and negative consequences and peer influence as prox...
Objective: Social influences are among the most robust predictors of adolescent substance use and mi...
Peer pressure is consistently implicated in the excessive drinking of college students. However, bot...
College students are usually in their late adolescence and young adulthood. In this stage of develop...
Utilizing longitudinal data on 345 high school students, this study investigates the impact that pee...
This study examined the relationship between alcohol consumption patterns and the felt perception of...
The social norms approach to college drinking suggests that students misperceive the drinking behavi...
Peer crowd affiliation (PCA) has been linked to alcohol use in adolescents, with patterns varying by...
The purpose of this study is to assess a hypothesized model of the influences of alcohol-related exp...
Past research has shown that college students consistently misperceive the amount of alcohol that th...
Respondents in the current study were 183 first-year undergraduate students at the University of Win...
Alcohol abuse among college students comes with consequences that can be academic, social, emotional...
Objective: Risk-taking behavior (e.g., alcohol abuse, tobacco usage, misuse of prescription medicati...
Alcohol use is a pervasive problem among college students, with 59% of full-time students reporting ...
Objective The present study examines the relationships among reasons for drinking, alcohol consumpti...