Drinking intention-behavior links vary by affect among heavy-drinking young adults: An ecological momentary assessment and transdermal sensor study.

IF 3.2 2区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Psychology of Addictive Behaviors Pub Date : 2025-03-01 Epub Date: 2025-01-16 DOI:10.1037/adb0001060
Gabriel C Rodríguez, Jimikaye Courtney, John Felt, Michael A Russell
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Abstract

Objective: Drinking intention is a predictor of heavy-drinking episodes and could serve as a real-time target for preventive interventions. However, the association is inconsistent and relatively weak. Considering the affective context when intentions are formed might improve results by revealing conditions in which intention-behavior links are strongest and the predictive power of intentions is greatest.

Method: We investigated the links between drinking intentions reported in the morning and same-day drinking behavior, moderated by positive and negative affect (PA, NA) in a sample of heavy-drinking young adults. Participants wore the SCRAM continuous alcohol monitor transdermal alcohol sensor anklet for 6 consecutive days in their natural environments and responded to daily ecological momentary assessments that included morning intentions to drink and PA/NA items. Drinking events and patterns were measured using morning-report counts and features from the sensor. Bayesian gamma-hurdle and Poisson multilevel models with noninformative priors tested day-level associations. We hypothesized that drinking intention-behavior associations would be strongest on days with high levels of PA, but we did not hypothesize directionality for the NA effect given the conflicting results in previous literature.

Results: Day-level drinking intention-behavior associations were stronger on days with higher versus lower PA according to sensors features. Associations were also stronger on days with lower versus higher NA.

Conclusions: The strength of intention-behavior links may partly depend on the affective contexts in which intentions are formed. Results could fine-tune intervention approaches by elucidating the affective contexts in which intentions may more clearly link to drinking behavior to reduce the intensity of an episode-better anticipating problematic drinking among young adults. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).

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饮酒意向-行为之间的联系因酗酒年轻人的影响而异:一项生态瞬时评估和透皮传感器研究。
目的:饮酒意向是重度饮酒发作的预测因子,可作为预防干预的实时目标。然而,这种联系是不一致的,而且相对较弱。考虑意图形成时的情感背景可能会通过揭示意图-行为联系最强和意图预测能力最强的条件来改善结果。方法:我们在大量饮酒的年轻人样本中调查了早上报告的饮酒意图与当天饮酒行为之间的联系,并通过积极和消极影响(PA, NA)进行调节。参与者在自然环境中连续6天佩戴SCRAM连续酒精监测透皮酒精传感器脚环,并对每日生态瞬间评估做出反应,包括早晨饮酒意图和PA/NA项目。使用早晨报告计数和传感器的特征来测量饮酒事件和模式。具有非信息性先验的贝叶斯伽玛-障碍和泊松多层模型测试了日水平的关联。我们假设,在PA水平高的日子里,饮酒意向-行为关联最强,但鉴于之前文献中相互矛盾的结果,我们没有假设NA效应的方向性。结果:根据传感器特征,日水平的饮酒意图-行为关联在PA较高的日子比PA较低的日子更强。在低NA和高NA的日子里,相关性也更强。结论:意图-行为联系的强度可能部分取决于意图形成的情感环境。结果可以通过阐明情感环境来调整干预方法,在情感环境中,意图可能更清楚地与饮酒行为联系在一起,以减少事件的强度-更好地预测年轻人的饮酒问题。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA,版权所有)。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
11.80%
发文量
165
期刊介绍: Psychology of Addictive Behaviors publishes peer-reviewed original articles related to the psychological aspects of addictive behaviors. The journal includes articles on the following topics: - alcohol and alcoholism - drug use and abuse - eating disorders - smoking and nicotine addiction, and other excessive behaviors (e.g., gambling) Full-length research reports, literature reviews, brief reports, and comments are published.
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