Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W58954683> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 89 of
89
with 100 items per page.
- W58954683 endingPage "93" @default.
- W58954683 startingPage "78" @default.
- W58954683 abstract "Alcohol use and abuse among college students is of serious concern for a variety of social and health-related reasons. High levels of consumption have been attributed to impaired academic performance, early onset of substance dependence, risk of vehicle-related accidents, and elevated threat of violence, sexual assault, and other illegal behaviors (Ellison, Bradshaw, Rote, Storch, & Trevino, 2008). In 2007 the U.S. Surgeon General declared underage alcohol use a chief health concern for the nation, emphasizing the importance of research into the predictors of and protectors against college-age drinking (Brown, Salsman, Brechting, 8c Carlson, 2007). Recent investigations into these factors have established a number of prevalent variables related to alcohol use including both demographic (e.g., gender, ethnicity, socioeconomic status) and biological factors (prenatal exposure, generic predisposition, cognitive functioning) that remain relatively constant throughout the lifespan (Chassin, Hussong, 8c Beltran, 2009). However, environmentally determined correlates are more likely to differ as a function of time as aspirations, stress, and peer groups undergo change and maturation, likewise producing varying effects on substance use. Consequently, although religiosity--that is, the quality of being religious or of devout faith--has been regarded as one such environmental protective factor in adulthood, the mechanisms behind this relationship remain unclear among emerging adults (Brechting et al., 2010; Convyn, 2002). Whereas research asserts that adults frequently use alcohol as a means of coping with stress, anxiety, or depression (e.g., Grunbaum, Tortolero, Weller, & Gingiss, 2000; Strawser, Storch, Geffken, Killiany, & Baumeister, 2004; Wills, Yaeger, & Sandy, 2003), drinking behaviors within the college population are primarily driven by social motives (Bahr, Maughan, Marcos, & Li, 1998; Perkins, 1987; Regnerus, 2006; Westmaas, Moeller, & Woicik, 2007). For this very reason, studies have suggested that public religiosity's impact on alcohol use is largely mediated by peer and parent lifestyles, values, and socialization (Burkett, 1993; Ellison et al., 2008; Perkins, 1987; Regnerus, 2006; Wood, Read, Mitchell, & Brand, 2004). Even so, measurements of religiosity as a construct rarely separate these social factors from more internal, private forms of devotion and, when assessed with respect to substance use and other risky behaviors, religiosity is not often analyzed beyond participants' religious denomination and frequency of service attendance. This study therefore aims to expand this limited area of research within the emerging adult population, at which time college students have the choice to pursue or refrain from opportunities to establish new peer groups, drink while underage, maintain contact with family, and become religiously involved, all of which may alter perceptions of and behaviors toward alcohol. Religiosity and Alcohol Use The sparse literature concerning the association between religiosity and substance use has generally not distinguished between religion and spirituality, which have often been combined into a single construct (e.g., Bert, 2011; Good, Willoughby, & Busseri, 2010). Hodge, Andereck, and Montoya (2007) were among the first to distinguish spirituality and religiosity based on the ways in which people exhibit their beliefs. Specifically, they proposed that spirituality be defined in individual, existential, and relational terms of an almost transcendental nature (e.g., I often experience a feeling of unity with the earth and all livingthings) while religion should be displayed as a combination of communal, organizational, and structured expressions (i.e., frequency of church attendance and religious organization participation). Building off this distinction, a study conducted by Borders, Curran, Mattox, and Booth (2010) assessed religiosity through a set of clear dimensions that not only addressed examples of faith and internal thoughts but also separated private religious practices from spiritual beliefs. …" @default.
- W58954683 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W58954683 creator A5011065530 @default.
- W58954683 creator A5013467630 @default.
- W58954683 date "2013-03-01" @default.
- W58954683 modified "2023-09-27" @default.
- W58954683 title "Moderators of the Relationship between Religiosity and Alcohol Use in College Students" @default.
- W58954683 cites W1968628650 @default.
- W58954683 cites W1971667457 @default.
- W58954683 cites W1983496999 @default.
- W58954683 cites W1983513623 @default.
- W58954683 cites W1984218859 @default.
- W58954683 cites W1993364275 @default.
- W58954683 cites W1997034081 @default.
- W58954683 cites W2005782770 @default.
- W58954683 cites W2009519432 @default.
- W58954683 cites W2012963283 @default.
- W58954683 cites W2020095240 @default.
- W58954683 cites W2020846798 @default.
- W58954683 cites W2026500269 @default.
- W58954683 cites W2028828666 @default.
- W58954683 cites W2050151594 @default.
- W58954683 cites W2057745377 @default.
- W58954683 cites W2064567524 @default.
- W58954683 cites W2065648245 @default.
- W58954683 cites W2077878090 @default.
- W58954683 cites W2082045527 @default.
- W58954683 cites W2083370809 @default.
- W58954683 cites W2085210206 @default.
- W58954683 cites W2093222646 @default.
- W58954683 cites W2107018038 @default.
- W58954683 cites W2120190197 @default.
- W58954683 cites W2127326375 @default.
- W58954683 cites W2132128674 @default.
- W58954683 cites W2139446573 @default.
- W58954683 cites W2144323266 @default.
- W58954683 cites W2166372900 @default.
- W58954683 cites W2172140946 @default.
- W58954683 cites W2323169909 @default.
- W58954683 cites W2327989009 @default.
- W58954683 cites W2329905746 @default.
- W58954683 cites W2796587718 @default.
- W58954683 cites W2912553447 @default.
- W58954683 cites W320794907 @default.
- W58954683 cites W4243621913 @default.
- W58954683 cites W4249222040 @default.
- W58954683 cites W2042884916 @default.
- W58954683 doi "https://doi.org/10.1177/009164711304100106" @default.
- W58954683 hasPublicationYear "2013" @default.
- W58954683 type Work @default.
- W58954683 sameAs 58954683 @default.
- W58954683 citedByCount "8" @default.
- W58954683 countsByYear W589546832014 @default.
- W58954683 countsByYear W589546832015 @default.
- W58954683 countsByYear W589546832018 @default.
- W58954683 countsByYear W589546832020 @default.
- W58954683 countsByYear W589546832021 @default.
- W58954683 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W58954683 hasAuthorship W58954683A5011065530 @default.
- W58954683 hasAuthorship W58954683A5013467630 @default.
- W58954683 hasConcept C15744967 @default.
- W58954683 hasConcept C2779793952 @default.
- W58954683 hasConcept C70410870 @default.
- W58954683 hasConcept C77805123 @default.
- W58954683 hasConceptScore W58954683C15744967 @default.
- W58954683 hasConceptScore W58954683C2779793952 @default.
- W58954683 hasConceptScore W58954683C70410870 @default.
- W58954683 hasConceptScore W58954683C77805123 @default.
- W58954683 hasIssue "1" @default.
- W58954683 hasLocation W589546831 @default.
- W58954683 hasOpenAccess W58954683 @default.
- W58954683 hasPrimaryLocation W589546831 @default.
- W58954683 hasRelatedWork W2014447469 @default.
- W58954683 hasRelatedWork W2056451712 @default.
- W58954683 hasRelatedWork W2081375424 @default.
- W58954683 hasRelatedWork W2255508675 @default.
- W58954683 hasRelatedWork W2316755877 @default.
- W58954683 hasRelatedWork W2436991499 @default.
- W58954683 hasRelatedWork W2568392089 @default.
- W58954683 hasRelatedWork W2592717949 @default.
- W58954683 hasRelatedWork W2748952813 @default.
- W58954683 hasRelatedWork W2899084033 @default.
- W58954683 hasVolume "41" @default.
- W58954683 isParatext "false" @default.
- W58954683 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W58954683 magId "58954683" @default.
- W58954683 workType "article" @default.