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Psychological expectancy as mediator of vulnerability to alcoholism.

Author
Abstract
:

Alcohol expectancy has proven to be a powerful predictor of drinking behavior, including alcoholism, in a wide range of groups. Three recent studies that begin to address expectancy's relation to other alcoholism vulnerability factors are reviewed. Results indicate that: (1) expectancies for reinforcement from alcohol predate teens' first drinking experiences; (2) expectancies predict subsequent drinking onset and problem drinking; (3) high initial expectancies lead to a vicious cycle of progressively more drinking and more positive expectancies during the adolescent years; (4) expectancy mediates the influence of family drinking history on adolescent drinking; and (5) as an alcohol-specific risk factor, expectancy adds to and (in women) interacts with more general, dispositional (personality) risk factors to predict problem drinking in young adults. These findings support the model of expectancy as a mediator of the original causal influences of earlier learning experiences.

Year of Publication
:
1994
Journal
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Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
Volume
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708
Number of Pages
:
165-71
Date Published
:
1994
ISSN Number
:
0077-8923
URL
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https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/resolve/openurl?genre=article&sid=nlm:pubmed&issn=0077-8923&date=1994&volume=708&spage=165
DOI
:
10.1111/j.1749-6632.1994.tb24709.x
Short Title
:
Ann N Y Acad Sci
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