Predicting heavy episodic drinking using an extended temporal self-regulation theory

Addictive Behaviors
Nicola BlackLouise Sharpe

Abstract

Alcohol consumption contributes significantly to the global burden from disease and injury, and specific patterns of heavy episodic drinking contribute uniquely to this burden. Temporal self-regulation theory and the dual-process model describe similar theoretical constructs that might predict heavy episodic drinking. The aims of this study were to test the utility of temporal self-regulation theory in predicting heavy episodic drinking, and examine whether the theoretical relationships suggested by the dual-process model significantly extend temporal self-regulation theory. This was a predictive study with 149 Australian adults. Measures were questionnaires (self-report habit index, cues to action scale, purpose-made intention questionnaire, timeline follow-back questionnaire) and executive function tasks (Stroop, Tower of London, operation span). Participants completed measures of theoretical constructs at baseline and reported their alcohol consumption two weeks later. Data were analysed using hierarchical multiple linear regression. Temporal self-regulation theory significantly predicted heavy episodic drinking (R2=48.0-54.8%, p<0.001) and the hypothesised extension significantly improved the prediction of heavy episodic dr...Continue Reading

Citations

Jun 4, 2020·Psychology & Health·Angela Moran, Barbara Mullan
Feb 20, 2020·International Journal of Behavioral Medicine·Caitlin LiddelowElizaveta Novoradovskaya
May 4, 2021·British Journal of Health Psychology·Barbara MullanCecilie Thøgersen-Ntoumani
Aug 8, 2021·Journal of Behavioral Medicine·Christopher M Jones, Benjamin Schüz

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