The Roles of Sensation Seeking and Level of Response to Negative, Sedative Alcohol Effects in the Intergenerational Transmission of Risk for Developing Alcohol Use Disorders

abstract: The present study tested the respective mediating effects of sensation seeking and initial level of response (LR) to negative, sedative alcohol effects on the relation between the density of familial history of alcoholism and adolescent alcohol use. Additionally, the present study tested t...

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Other Authors: Pandika, Danielle Mutiara (Author)
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.36514
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-365142018-06-22T03:06:57Z The Roles of Sensation Seeking and Level of Response to Negative, Sedative Alcohol Effects in the Intergenerational Transmission of Risk for Developing Alcohol Use Disorders abstract: The present study tested the respective mediating effects of sensation seeking and initial level of response (LR) to negative, sedative alcohol effects on the relation between the density of familial history of alcoholism and adolescent alcohol use. Additionally, the present study tested the direct effect of LR to negative, sedative alcohol effects on adolescent drinking over and above the effects of sensation seeking; and also tested the moderating effect of sensation seeking on the relation between level of response negative, sedative alcohol effects and adolescent drinking. Specifically, OLS regression models first estimated the effects of sensation seeking, LR to negative, sedative alcohol effects, and their interaction on alcohol outcomes, over and above the influence of covariates. Indirect effects were then tested using the PRODCLIN method through RMediation. Analyses failed to support sensation seeking as a mediator in the relation between familial history of alcoholism and adolescent drinking, and as a moderator of the relation between LR and adolescent drinking. However, analyses did support a robust direct effect of LR to negative, sedative alcohol effects on adolescent alcohol involvement. A significant mediating effect of initial LR to negative, sedative alcohol effects on the relation between familial alcoholism and adolescent drinking was found, however failed to maintain significance in post-hoc analyses attenuating the downward bias of the measure of initial LR. Initial LR to negative, sedative alcohol effects continued to predict adolescent drinking after attenuating measure bias. These findings strengthen research on initial LR to negative, sedative alcohol effects as a risk for greater alcohol involvement in adolescence, and underscore the complexity of studying the familial transmission of alcoholism in adolescent populations Dissertation/Thesis Pandika, Danielle Mutiara (Author) Chassin, Laurie (Advisor) Corbin, William (Committee member) Aiken, Leona (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Psychology Alcoholism Risk Level of Response to Alcohol Sensation Seeking eng 87 pages Masters Thesis Psychology 2015 Masters Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.36514 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2015
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Psychology
Alcoholism Risk
Level of Response to Alcohol
Sensation Seeking
spellingShingle Psychology
Alcoholism Risk
Level of Response to Alcohol
Sensation Seeking
The Roles of Sensation Seeking and Level of Response to Negative, Sedative Alcohol Effects in the Intergenerational Transmission of Risk for Developing Alcohol Use Disorders
description abstract: The present study tested the respective mediating effects of sensation seeking and initial level of response (LR) to negative, sedative alcohol effects on the relation between the density of familial history of alcoholism and adolescent alcohol use. Additionally, the present study tested the direct effect of LR to negative, sedative alcohol effects on adolescent drinking over and above the effects of sensation seeking; and also tested the moderating effect of sensation seeking on the relation between level of response negative, sedative alcohol effects and adolescent drinking. Specifically, OLS regression models first estimated the effects of sensation seeking, LR to negative, sedative alcohol effects, and their interaction on alcohol outcomes, over and above the influence of covariates. Indirect effects were then tested using the PRODCLIN method through RMediation. Analyses failed to support sensation seeking as a mediator in the relation between familial history of alcoholism and adolescent drinking, and as a moderator of the relation between LR and adolescent drinking. However, analyses did support a robust direct effect of LR to negative, sedative alcohol effects on adolescent alcohol involvement. A significant mediating effect of initial LR to negative, sedative alcohol effects on the relation between familial alcoholism and adolescent drinking was found, however failed to maintain significance in post-hoc analyses attenuating the downward bias of the measure of initial LR. Initial LR to negative, sedative alcohol effects continued to predict adolescent drinking after attenuating measure bias. These findings strengthen research on initial LR to negative, sedative alcohol effects as a risk for greater alcohol involvement in adolescence, and underscore the complexity of studying the familial transmission of alcoholism in adolescent populations === Dissertation/Thesis === Masters Thesis Psychology 2015
author2 Pandika, Danielle Mutiara (Author)
author_facet Pandika, Danielle Mutiara (Author)
title The Roles of Sensation Seeking and Level of Response to Negative, Sedative Alcohol Effects in the Intergenerational Transmission of Risk for Developing Alcohol Use Disorders
title_short The Roles of Sensation Seeking and Level of Response to Negative, Sedative Alcohol Effects in the Intergenerational Transmission of Risk for Developing Alcohol Use Disorders
title_full The Roles of Sensation Seeking and Level of Response to Negative, Sedative Alcohol Effects in the Intergenerational Transmission of Risk for Developing Alcohol Use Disorders
title_fullStr The Roles of Sensation Seeking and Level of Response to Negative, Sedative Alcohol Effects in the Intergenerational Transmission of Risk for Developing Alcohol Use Disorders
title_full_unstemmed The Roles of Sensation Seeking and Level of Response to Negative, Sedative Alcohol Effects in the Intergenerational Transmission of Risk for Developing Alcohol Use Disorders
title_sort roles of sensation seeking and level of response to negative, sedative alcohol effects in the intergenerational transmission of risk for developing alcohol use disorders
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.36514
_version_ 1718700995473571840