Retraction of "Event-level risk for negative alcohol consequences in emerging adults: The role of affect, motivation, and context" by Waddell et al. (2024).

IF 3.2 2区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Reports the retraction of "Event-level risk for negative alcohol consequences in emerging adults: The role of affect, motivation, and context" by Jack T. Waddell, Scott E. King, Sarah A. Okey and William R. Corbin (Psychology of Addictive Behaviors, 2024[Feb], Vol 38[1], 8-18). This article is being retracted at the request of the publisher, and the editor and all authors of the original article consented. This article was published in error, as it is a first stage Registered Report that has received in-principle acceptance. Given the workflow of a Registered Report, the first journal publication appears after data collection and results have been reported in the second stage Registered Report submission (see workflow at https://www.cos.io/initiatives/registered-reports). This stage one article is being removed from the literature to avoid confusion and will instead be preregistered as a Registered Report Protocol Preregistration (https://osf.io/7euzd/). (The following abstract of the original article appeared in record 2022-80654-001.) Objective: Decades of research has found support for the motivational model of alcohol use, such that positive/negative affect are indirectly associated with drinking behavior through drinking motives. However, research on event-level drinking motives is in its nascent stage, and studies have yet to consider how drinking context plays a role in the motivational pathway to both event- and person-level drinking behavior. Therefore, the present study seeks to test whether drinking context mediates the effect of affect and motivation on drinking outcomes at both the event- and person-level. Method: Data for this Stage 1 Registered Report will come from a recently completed ecological momentary assessment (EMA) study in emerging adults. The study collected data on 131 emerging adults, of whom 107 reported event-level social and solitary drinking during the EMA period. Multilevel structural equation modeling will be used to test whether predrinking affect is associated with predrinking motives, and whether drinking context (social vs. solitary drinking) mediates the effect of drinking motives on drinking outcomes. Models will parse within-/between-person variance, allowing the present study to test whether drinking context serves as a mechanism of risk in the motivational model at the event-level, or solely at the between-person level. Findings will inform personalized interventions and motivational models of drinking behavior. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

撤回 Waddell 等人(2024 年)撰写的 "新兴成年人酒精不良后果的事件级风险:Waddell 等人(2024 年)撰写的 "Event-level risk for negative alcohol consequences in emerging adults: the role of affect, motivation, and context "一文被撤回。
报告撤回了 Jack T. Waddell、Scott E. King、Sarah A. Okey 和 William R. Corbin 合著的《新兴成人酒精不良后果的事件级风险:Jack T. Waddell、Scott E. King、Sarah A. Okey 和 William R. Corbin 合著的 "The role of affect, motivation, and context"(《成瘾行为心理学》,2024 年[2 月],第 38 卷[1],8-18 页)。应出版商的要求,经编辑和所有原文作者同意,本文将被撤回。这篇文章发表有误,因为它是一篇已获得原则性接受的第一阶段注册报告。根据注册报告的工作流程,在第二阶段注册报告提交中报告了数据收集和结果后,才会在期刊上发表第一篇文章(参见 https://www.cos.io/initiatives/registered-reports 上的工作流程)。为避免混淆,这篇第一阶段文章将从文献中删除,改为注册报告协议预注册 (https://osf.io/7euzd/)。(以下为 2022-80654-001 号记录中的原始文章摘要)。目的:数十年的研究发现,饮酒动机模型支持积极/消极情绪通过饮酒动机与饮酒行为间接相关。然而,对事件层面饮酒动机的研究尚处于起步阶段,研究还没有考虑饮酒情境在事件和个人层面饮酒行为的动机路径中是如何发挥作用的。因此,本研究试图检验饮酒情境是否在事件和个人层面上介导了情感和动机对饮酒结果的影响。研究方法:本第一阶段注册报告的数据将来自最近完成的一项针对新兴成人的生态瞬间评估(EMA)研究。该研究收集了 131 名新成人的数据,其中 107 人在 EMA 期间报告了事件层面的社交饮酒和单独饮酒。我们将采用多层次结构方程模型来检验饮酒前情绪是否与饮酒前动机相关,以及饮酒情境(社交饮酒与单独饮酒)是否会调节饮酒动机对饮酒结果的影响。模型将分析人内/人与人之间的差异,从而使本研究能够检验饮酒情境是在事件层面还是仅在人与人之间层面作为动机模型中的风险机制。研究结果将为个性化干预措施和饮酒行为动机模型提供参考。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, 版权所有)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
11.80%
发文量
165
期刊介绍: Psychology of Addictive Behaviors publishes peer-reviewed original articles related to the psychological aspects of addictive behaviors. The journal includes articles on the following topics: - alcohol and alcoholism - drug use and abuse - eating disorders - smoking and nicotine addiction, and other excessive behaviors (e.g., gambling) Full-length research reports, literature reviews, brief reports, and comments are published.
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