The present application is a revision of an earlier application requesting four years of support to conduct a longitudinal follow-up study of a recently completed random sample survey of 2052 black and white adolescents, aged 13 to 19. An 81% response rate was obtained. A conceptual model was presented to guide this research in which drinking in heterosexual social or sexual situations was hypothesized to increase the likelihood of engaging in high risk sexual behaviors. It was further proposed that drinking in sexual or potentially sexual situations may occur for one of two reasons: to reduce threat or manage discomfort in situations experienced as threatening (relief drinking), or to enhance positive affect in situations experienced as non-threatening (enhancement drinking). In turn, drinking for relief vs. enhancement motives was hypothesized to reflect different underlying etiologic processes. Analyses of our cross-sectional data provided strong support for key tenets of the proposed model, indicating that alcohol use in social/sexual situations may be a unique risk factor for high risk sexual behavior, and that drinking in these situations can be usefully understood within the proposed cognitive motivational framework. At the same time, however, we also found evidence that at least part of the association between drinking and risky sexual behaviors can be accounted for by more general lifestyle and personality variables. We therefore propose to continue analyses and publication of our cross- sectional data, and to conduct a four-year longitudinal follow-up of these adolescents. Broadly defined, the objectives for the proposed follow-up include: (l) implementation of both methodological and conceptual refinements to the event-level approach used to examine the alcohol-risky sexual behavior link in our cross-sectional survey, and (2)expansion of our focus to examine non-causal as well as reciprocal and reverse causal processes that may underlie the association between drinking and risky sexual behavior. In addition, gender, race, and age differences in these relationships will be systematically explored. By embracing a range of plausible causal and non-causal models, we hope to contribute to a fuller explication of the multiple processes likely to underlie and account for the relationship between alcohol use and sexual risk behaviors.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
2R01AA008047-04A1
Application #
2044252
Study Section
Clinical and Treatment Subcommittee (ALCP)
Project Start
1988-09-29
Project End
1997-11-30
Budget Start
1993-12-01
Budget End
1994-11-30
Support Year
4
Fiscal Year
1994
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
State University of New York at Buffalo
Department
Psychology
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
038633251
City
Buffalo
State
NY
Country
United States
Zip Code
14260
O'Hara, Ross E; Cooper, M Lynne (2015) Bidirectional associations between alcohol use and sexual risk-taking behavior from adolescence into young adulthood. Arch Sex Behav 44:857-71
Levitt, Ash; Cooper, M Lynne (2015) Should Parents Allow Their Adolescent Children to Drink at Home? Family Factors as Predictors of Alcohol Involvement Trajectories Over 15 Years. J Stud Alcohol Drugs 76:661-70
Levitt, Ash; Cooper, M Lynne (2010) Daily alcohol use and romantic relationship functioning: evidence of bidirectional, gender-, and context-specific effects. Pers Soc Psychol Bull 36:1706-22
Cooper, M Lynne (2010) Toward a person x situation model of sexual risk-taking behaviors: illuminating the conditional effects of traits across sexual situations and relationship contexts. J Pers Soc Psychol 98:319-41
Cooper, M Lynne; Krull, Jennifer L; Agocha, V Bede et al. (2008) Motivational pathways to alcohol use and abuse among Black and White adolescents. J Abnorm Psychol 117:485-501
Sheldon, Kennon M; Cooper, M Lynne (2008) Goal striving within agentic and communal roles: separate but functionally similar pathways to enhanced well-being. J Pers 76:415-48
Sheldon, Melanie Skaggs; Cooper, M Lynne; Geary, David C et al. (2006) Fertility cycle patterns in motives for sexual behavior. Pers Soc Psychol Bull 32:1659-73
Orcutt, Holly K; Cooper, M Lynne; Garcia, Marilyn (2005) Use of sexual intercourse to reduce negative affect as a prospective mediator of sexual revictimization. J Trauma Stress 18:729-39
Cooper, M Lynne; Wood, Phillip K; Orcutt, Holly K et al. (2003) Personality and the predisposition to engage in risky or problem behaviors during adolescence. J Pers Soc Psychol 84:390-410
Cooper, M Lynne; Sheldon, Melanie Skaggs (2002) Seventy years of research on personality and close relationships: substantive and methodological trends over time. J Pers 70:783-812

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