4.1 Article

Examining Social Influences on Why We Drink: Perceived Drinking Motives in the Social Network Impact Individuals' Own Drinking Motives and Alcohol Use

期刊

SUBSTANCE USE & MISUSE
卷 57, 期 13, 页码 1931-1939

出版社

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/10826084.2022.2120364

关键词

Social influence; social selection; drinking motives; social network; emerging adults

资金

  1. Dalhousie University Department of Psychiatry Research Fund grant

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This study investigated the impacts of drinking motives on binge drinking in emerging adults, and found that the motives of others can indirectly influence an individual's own drinking behavior. This suggests that those around emerging adults play a significant role in their drinking behaviors and motives.
Introduction: A significant body of research has investigated the impacts of social influence and social selection on binge drinking and risk factors for binge drinking in emerging adults; however, one risk factor for binge drinking that has yet to be thoroughly investigated in this regard is drinking motives. Preliminary research suggests the motives of others may impact emerging adults' own alcohol use indirectly through their own motives (i.e., social influence). While these are important findings, research to date has been only conducted with adolescents or dyads and has not examined selection (i.e., selecting social network members with similar motives). We filled these gaps with a longitudinal egocentric social network design. Methods: Emerging adults (N = 177) completed measures on their alcohol use, drinking motives, and social networks at baseline (T1) and four-month follow-up (T2). Results: A cross-lagged panel model indicated T1 perceived network drinking motives predicted T2 participant drinking motives (for all motives but social), but T1 participant drinking motives did not predict T2 perceived network drinking motives. Path analysis indicated T1 perceived network drinking motives predicted T2 participant binge drinking frequency indirectly through T2 participant drinking motives for enhancement, coping-with-anxiety, and conformity, but not social or coping-with-depression, motives. Discussion: Results suggests drinking motives of those around emerging adults impact their own drinking motives, and indirectly, their own alcohol use. We found evidence of social influence, but not social selection. Conclusion: It appears that those around emerging adults have the capacity to influence their drinking behaviors and drinking motives.

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