Examining the social ecology of a bar-crawl: An exploratory pilot study.

Many of the problems associated with alcohol occur after a single drinking event (e.g. drink driving, assault). These acute alcohol problems have a huge global impact and account for a large percentage of unintentional and intentional injuries in the world. Nonetheless, alcohol research and preventi...

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Main Authors: John D Clapp, Danielle R Madden, Douglas D Mooney, Kristin E Dahlquist
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5617212?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-9b9fd3123ec6474ea924d069d788afd62020-11-24T22:07:25ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01129e018523810.1371/journal.pone.0185238Examining the social ecology of a bar-crawl: An exploratory pilot study.John D ClappDanielle R MaddenDouglas D MooneyKristin E DahlquistMany of the problems associated with alcohol occur after a single drinking event (e.g. drink driving, assault). These acute alcohol problems have a huge global impact and account for a large percentage of unintentional and intentional injuries in the world. Nonetheless, alcohol research and preventive interventions rarely focus on drinking at the event-level since drinking events are complex, dynamic, and methodologically challenging to observe. This exploratory study provides an example of how event-level data may be collected, analyzed, and interpreted. The drinking behavior of twenty undergraduate students enrolled at a large Midwestern public university was observed during a single bar crawl event that is organized by students annually. Alcohol use was monitored with transdermal alcohol devices coupled with ecological momentary assessments and geospatial data. "Small N, Big Data" studies have the potential to advance health behavior theory and to guide real-time interventions. However, such studies generate large amounts of within subject data that can be challenging to analyze and present. This study examined how to visually display event-level data and also explored the relationship between some basic indicators and alcohol consumption.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5617212?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author John D Clapp
Danielle R Madden
Douglas D Mooney
Kristin E Dahlquist
spellingShingle John D Clapp
Danielle R Madden
Douglas D Mooney
Kristin E Dahlquist
Examining the social ecology of a bar-crawl: An exploratory pilot study.
PLoS ONE
author_facet John D Clapp
Danielle R Madden
Douglas D Mooney
Kristin E Dahlquist
author_sort John D Clapp
title Examining the social ecology of a bar-crawl: An exploratory pilot study.
title_short Examining the social ecology of a bar-crawl: An exploratory pilot study.
title_full Examining the social ecology of a bar-crawl: An exploratory pilot study.
title_fullStr Examining the social ecology of a bar-crawl: An exploratory pilot study.
title_full_unstemmed Examining the social ecology of a bar-crawl: An exploratory pilot study.
title_sort examining the social ecology of a bar-crawl: an exploratory pilot study.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Many of the problems associated with alcohol occur after a single drinking event (e.g. drink driving, assault). These acute alcohol problems have a huge global impact and account for a large percentage of unintentional and intentional injuries in the world. Nonetheless, alcohol research and preventive interventions rarely focus on drinking at the event-level since drinking events are complex, dynamic, and methodologically challenging to observe. This exploratory study provides an example of how event-level data may be collected, analyzed, and interpreted. The drinking behavior of twenty undergraduate students enrolled at a large Midwestern public university was observed during a single bar crawl event that is organized by students annually. Alcohol use was monitored with transdermal alcohol devices coupled with ecological momentary assessments and geospatial data. "Small N, Big Data" studies have the potential to advance health behavior theory and to guide real-time interventions. However, such studies generate large amounts of within subject data that can be challenging to analyze and present. This study examined how to visually display event-level data and also explored the relationship between some basic indicators and alcohol consumption.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5617212?pdf=render
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