Literature DB >> 33591776

Measuring subjective alcohol effects in daily life using contemporary young adult language.

Ashley N Linden-Carmichael1, Brian H Calhoun1.   

Abstract

Young adults' subjective feelings of alcohol's effects are a key predictor of engagement in risky behavior such as deciding whether to drive after drinking. To best inform prevention messaging and tailor intervention techniques that target high-risk drinking, it is critical that our measurement best captures subjective feelings. Standard sliding scales (0-100 rating of, "how drunk do you feel?") may have some challenges with distinguishing between levels of subjective responses to alcohol. The current daily diary study compared the utility of the standard sliding scale to a newly developed sliding scale that uses contemporary, crowd-sourced language from young adults as evenly spaced anchors (slightly buzzed, tipsy/"happy," drunk, and wasted) along a continuum of subjective effects of alcohol. Participants were 154 young adult substance users (58% women) who completed up to 14 consecutive daily reports of their substance use behavior. The four-anchored sliding scale performed similarly well as the standard scale in predicting alcohol use outcomes while showing the advantages of recording higher mean values/standard deviations and demonstrating that participants used the anchors to denote varying degrees of subjective effects. Findings suggest that the four-anchored subjective alcohol effects sliding scale is a viable alternative to the standard scale. By providing evenly spaced anchors that reflect incremental differences in language young adults use to describe their subjective states, the proposed scale may provide a guide for participants to indicate how they feel after drinking and may better capture variability in alcohol's effects. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).

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Year:  2021        PMID: 33591776      PMCID: PMC8375683          DOI: 10.1037/pha0000447

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Exp Clin Psychopharmacol        ISSN: 1064-1297            Impact factor:   3.157


  38 in total

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5.  An event-level examination of sex differences and subjective intoxication in alcohol-related aggression.

Authors:  Patrick D Quinn; Cynthia A Stappenbeck; Kim Fromme
Journal:  Exp Clin Psychopharmacol       Date:  2013-02-18       Impact factor: 3.157

6.  Psychometric analysis and validity of the daily alcohol-related consequences and evaluations measure for young adults.

Authors:  Christine M Lee; Jessica M Cronce; Scott A Baldwin; Anne M Fairlie; David C Atkins; Megan E Patrick; Lindsey Zimmerman; Mary E Larimer; Barbara C Leigh
Journal:  Psychol Assess       Date:  2016-05-19

7.  Differences in acute response to alcohol between African Americans and European Americans.

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8.  A Call for Research on High-Intensity Alcohol Use.

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Review 9.  The burden of alcohol use: excessive alcohol consumption and related consequences among college students.

Authors:  Aaron White; Ralph Hingson
Journal:  Alcohol Res       Date:  2013

10.  Just-in-Time Adaptive Interventions (JITAIs) in Mobile Health: Key Components and Design Principles for Ongoing Health Behavior Support.

Authors:  Inbal Nahum-Shani; Shawna N Smith; Bonnie J Spring; Linda M Collins; Katie Witkiewitz; Ambuj Tewari; Susan A Murphy
Journal:  Ann Behav Med       Date:  2018-05-18
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