MODERATION IN EXCESS - BINGE DRINKING AND SOCIAL-INTERACTION AMONG COLLEGE-STUDENTS

Citation
Jb. Nezlek et al., MODERATION IN EXCESS - BINGE DRINKING AND SOCIAL-INTERACTION AMONG COLLEGE-STUDENTS, Journal of studies on alcohol, 55(3), 1994, pp. 342-351
Citations number
31
Categorie Soggetti
Substance Abuse","Substance Abuse",Psychology
ISSN journal
0096882X
Volume
55
Issue
3
Year of publication
1994
Pages
342 - 351
Database
ISI
SICI code
0096-882X(1994)55:3<342:MIE-BD>2.0.ZU;2-0
Abstract
The research on the relationships between sociability and alcohol cons umption has produced inconsistent findings, leading some to conclude t hat there are no such relationships. However, this research has tended to focus on sociability as a personality construct, not on sociabilit y defined as social activity. In the present study, college students ( N = 90) used a social interaction diary to provide measures of their s ocial activity, and they provided descriptions of their total alcohol consumption and of their frequency of binge drinking. Although total c onsumption per se was not reliably related to the quality or quantity of participants' social lives, frequency of binge drinking was related to some aspects of social interaction. Specifically, participants who had no binge-drinking episodes reported less intimacy and less disclo sure in their interactions than those who had some episodes. However, men who reported having three or more binge episodes per week experien ced less intimacy in their interactions than any other group of men or women. It is possible that because some binge drinking is normative a nd may be seen as desirable among college students, students who have a more normative number of binge-drinking episodes are integrated more fully into the college community than students who have no episodes o r too many episodes.