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Cross-cultural examination of different personality pathways to alcohol use and misuse in emerging adulthood
•Examined personality etiological pathways to alcohol use in three countries.•Drinking motives mediated the relations between personality and alcohol outcomes.•Results supported the positive/negative affect regulation pathways across countries.•Antisocial behavior mediated the associations of traits...
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Published in: | Drug and alcohol dependence 2018-11, Vol.192, p.193-200 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | •Examined personality etiological pathways to alcohol use in three countries.•Drinking motives mediated the relations between personality and alcohol outcomes.•Results supported the positive/negative affect regulation pathways across countries.•Antisocial behavior mediated the associations of traits and alcohol consequences.•Evidence of the deviance proneness pathway was found cross-nationally.
Previous research has identified different, but not mutually exclusive, etiological pathways (i.e., the positive affect regulation pathway, the negative affect regulation pathway and the deviance proneness pathway) to alcohol use and misuse in which personality characteristics play a key role.
The present study aimed to simultaneously and cross-culturally examine all these personality pathways to alcohol use in a large sample of young adult drinkers (N = 1280) from the US, Argentina, and Spain.
Structural equation modeling was conducted to test the models. Multi-group models were conducted to test model invariance across countries and gender groups.
In the whole sample, low conscientiousness and extraversion were related to alcohol outcomes through enhancement drinking motives (i.e., positive affect regulation pathway), low emotional stability was related through coping drinking motives (i.e., negative affect regulation pathway), and low conscientiousness and low agreeableness were related through antisocial behavior (i.e., deviance proneness pathway). The model was invariant between gender groups. Some minor, yet significant, differences across countries arose. Specifically, antisocial behavior was a significant mediator of the association between agreeableness and alcohol use, but only in the US subsample.
The present findings suggest that risky-personality pathways for alcohol use and alcohol-related problems may be generalized across gender groups and cultures in young adults. |
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ISSN: | 0376-8716 1879-0046 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2018.08.004 |