4.4 Article

Triple spirals? A three-wave panel study on the longitudinal associations between social media use and young individuals' alcohol consumption

期刊

MEDIA PSYCHOLOGY
卷 24, 期 6, 页码 766-791

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ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/15213269.2020.1804404

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  1. Bijzonder Onderzoeksfonds KU Leuven/Research Fund KU Leuven [C12/16/008, PDM/18/040]

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The study identifies a significant positive relationship between self-sharing, exposure, and consumption, indicating that alcohol-related communication on social media may be associated with heavy drinking adolescents.
The present longitudinal study (N = 596, M-age at baseline = 16.96, SD =.78) combines an interdependent social media effects approach with Slater's reinforcing spirals model. As such, it is the first study to test a triple spiral between self-sharing of and exposure to alcohol-related content on social media, self-sharing and drinking behavior, and exposure and drinking behavior. We thereby differentiate between within-level and between-level relationships using a random intercepts cross-lagged panel model (RI-CLPM). The results indicate that there is a positive significant relationship between sharing, exposure, and consumption at the between-person level: Across waves, individuals who reported higher alcohol consumption also reported more frequent self-sharing, and those who reported more frequent self-sharing also reported more frequent exposure. Within-person change in self-sharing, exposure, and consumption are associated cross-sectionally, but these relationships do not endure over time. These results demonstrate that alcohol-related communication on social media effects may reflect a subgroup of heavy drinking adolescents who also share about their drinking behavior.

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