Department of Health Education and Promotion.
Center for Alcohol and Addiction Studies.
Psychol Addict Behav. 2019 May;33(3):297-303. doi: 10.1037/adb0000455. Epub 2019 Mar 14.
This study considered the influence of misperceptions of typical versus self-identified important peers' heavy drinking on personal heavy drinking intentions and frequency utilizing data from a complete social network of college students. The study sample included data from 1,313 students (44% male, 57% White, 15% Hispanic/Latinx) collected during the fall and spring semesters of their freshman year. Students provided perceived heavy drinking frequency for a typical student peer and up to 10 identified important peers. Personal past-month heavy drinking frequency was assessed for all participants at both time points. By comparing actual with perceived heavy drinking frequencies, measures of misperceptions of heavy drinking (accurately estimate, overestimate, underestimate) were constructed for both general and important peers. These misperceptions were then used as predictors of concurrent and prospective personal heavy drinking frequency and intentions using network autocorrelation analyses. The majority of students (84.8%) overestimated, 11.3% accurately estimated, and 3.9% underestimated heavy drinking among their general peers, whereas 42.0% accurately estimated, 36.9% overestimated, and 21.1% underestimated important peers' heavy drinking. For both referents, overestimation of peer heavy drinking was associated with more frequent heavy drinking and higher drinking intentions at both time points. Importantly, the effects of underestimating and overestimating close peers' drinking on personal alcohol use were significant after controlling for the influence of misperceptions of general peers' heavy drinking. Close peers are a critical referent group in assessments related to social norms for young adult alcohol use. Implications for prevention and intervention are discussed. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).
本研究利用大学生完整社交网络的数据,考虑了对典型和自我认同的重要同伴重度饮酒的误解对个人重度饮酒意图和频率的影响。研究样本包括 1313 名学生(44%为男性,57%为白人,15%为西班牙裔/拉丁裔)的数据,这些学生在新生入学的秋季和春季学期提供了一个典型学生同伴和最多 10 名被认定的重要同伴的重度饮酒频率。所有参与者都在这两个时间点上评估了过去一个月的重度饮酒频率。通过将实际和感知的重度饮酒频率进行比较,为一般和重要同伴构建了重度饮酒的误解(准确估计、高估、低估)的测量指标。然后使用网络自相关分析,将这些误解作为同期和前瞻性个人重度饮酒频率和意图的预测指标。大多数学生(84.8%)高估了一般同伴的重度饮酒,11.3%准确估计,3.9%低估了重度饮酒,而 42.0%准确估计,36.9%高估了重要同伴的重度饮酒,21.1%低估了重要同伴的重度饮酒。对于这两个参照群体,高估同伴的重度饮酒与两个时间点上更频繁的重度饮酒和更高的饮酒意图相关。重要的是,在控制了对一般同伴重度饮酒的误解影响后,低估和高估亲密同伴饮酒对个人饮酒的影响仍然显著。亲密同伴是评估年轻成人酒精使用社会规范的重要参照群体。讨论了预防和干预的意义。(PsycINFO 数据库记录(c)2019 APA,保留所有权利)。