25 research outputs found
The influence of confidence on associations among personal attitudes, perceived injunctive norms and alcohol consumption
Social norms theories hold that perceptions of the degree of approval for a behavior have a strong influence on one’s private attitudes and public behavior. In particular, being more approving of drinking and perceiving peers as more approving of drinking, are strongly associated with one’s own drinking. However, previous research has not considered that students may vary considerably in the confidence in their estimates of peer approval and in the confidence in their estimates of their own approval of drinking. The present research was designed to evaluate confidence as a moderator of associations among perceived injunctive norms, own attitudes, and drinking. We expected perceived injunctive norms and own attitudes would be more strongly associated with drinking among students who felt more confident in their estimates of peer approval and own attitudes. We were also interested in whether this might differ by gender. Injunctive norms and self-reported alcohol consumption were measured in a sample of 708 college students. Findings from negative binomial regression analyses supported moderation hypotheses for confidence and perceived injunction norms but not for personal attitudes. Thus, perceived injunctive norms were more strongly associated with own drinking among students who felt more confident in their estimates of friends’ approval of drinking. A three-way interaction further revealed that this was primarily true among women. Implications for norms and peer influence theories as well as interventions are discussed
Priming and social desirability of self-reported religiosity and alcohol consumption.
This research evaluated response biases of religiosity and alcohol consumption. Religiosity was assessed before or after questions regarding alcohol consumption. Participants who indicated religiosity first reported fewer drinks and drinking less frequently. Priming religion may result in underreporting drinking and these effects are not simply the result of socially desirability
Priming and social desirability of self-reported religiosity and alcohol consumption.
This research evaluated response biases of religiosity and alcohol consumption. Religiosity was assessed before or after questions regarding alcohol consumption. Participants who indicated religiosity first reported fewer drinks and drinking less frequently. Priming religion may result in underreporting drinking and these effects are not simply the result of socially desirability
Social-norms interventions for light and nondrinking students
Social-norms approaches to alcohol prevention are based on consistent findings that most students overestimate the prevalence of drinking among their peers. Most interventions have been developed for heavy-drinking students, and the applicability of social-norms approaches among abstaining or light-drinking students has yet to be evaluated. The present research aimed to evaluate the impact of two types of online social-norms interventions developed for abstaining or light-drinking students. Identification with other students was evaluated as a moderator. Participants included 423 freshmen and sophomore college students who reported never or rarely drinking at screening. Students were randomly assigned to one of three conditions: (a) personalized-norms feedback, (b) social-norms marketing ads, or (c) attention control. Data were analyzed using generalized linear mixed models. Results provided some support for both interventions but were stronger for social-norms marketing ads, particularly among participants who identified more closely with other students