Variation in the Drinking Trajectories of Freshmen College Students.
- 1 April 2005
- journal article
- Published by American Psychological Association (APA) in Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology
- Vol. 73 (2) , 229-238
- https://doi.org/10.1037/0022-006x.73.2.229
Abstract
F. K. Del Boca, J. Darkes, P. E. Greenbaum, and M. S. Goldman (2004) examined temporal variations in drinking during the freshmen college year and the relationship of several risk factors to these variations. Here, using the same data, the authors investigate whether a single growth curve adequately characterizes the variability in individual drinking trajectories. Latent growth mixture modeling identified 5 drinking trajectory classes: light-stable, light-stable plus high holiday, medium-increasing, highdecreasing, and heavy-stable. In multivariate predictor analyses, gender (i.e., more women) and lower alcohol expectancies distinguished the light-stable class from other trajectories; only expectancies differentiated the high-decreasing from the heavy-stable and medium-increasing classes. These findings allow for improved identification of individuals at risk for developing problematic trajectories and for development of interventions tailored to specific drinker classes.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Up Close and Personal: Temporal Variability in the Drinking of Individual College Students During Their First Year.Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 2004
- Alcohol Expectancy Mediation of Biopsychosocial Risk: Complex Patterns of Mediation.Experimental and Clinical Psychopharmacology, 2004
- Statistical and Substantive Checking in Growth Mixture Modeling: Comment on Bauer and Curran (2003).Psychological Methods, 2003
- Patterns and correlates of binge drinking trajectories from early adolescence to young adulthood.Health Psychology, 2003
- A Realistic Perspective on Pattern Representation in Growth Data: Comment on Bauer and Curran (2003).Psychological Methods, 2003
- Distributional Assumptions of Growth Mixture Models: Implications for Overextraction of Latent Trajectory Classes.Psychological Methods, 2003
- Monopoly 101Wilmott, 2003
- Sensation seeking–disinhibition and alcohol use: Exploring issues of criterion contamination.Psychological Assessment, 1998
- Power analysis and determination of sample size for covariance structure modeling.Psychological Methods, 1996
- Estimating the Dimension of a ModelThe Annals of Statistics, 1978