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- Title
- BINGE-DRINKING BEHAVIORS, ALCOHOL-RELATED CONSEQUENCES, AND HEALTH-RELATED QUALITY OF LIFE: DOES PSYCHOLOGICAL FLEXIBILITY PLAY A PART IN BINGE-DRINKING AND HEALTH BEHAVIORS OF COLLEGE STUDENTS?
- Creator
- Grix, Bethany
- Date
- 2014, 2014-07
- Description
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Binge-drinking among young adult populations is considered a global health and safety concern. Binge-drinking behavior has been directly...
Show moreBinge-drinking among young adult populations is considered a global health and safety concern. Binge-drinking behavior has been directly linked to immediate and long-term psychosocial, societal, and health-related consequences. To date, psychological flexibility and values-based committed action has been only theoretically linked to binge-drinking behavior, health, and alcohol-related consequences. Therefore, this study investigated binge-drinking behavior and its relationship with alcohol and health-related consequences, in a college-aged population, as well as the role psychological flexibility has within these relationships. Binge-drinking was defined as the consumption of ≥ 4/5 drinks (females/males, respectively), within a two hour period, over a 6-month period (NIAAA, 2004; Courney & Polnich, 2009). One hundred eighty-nine undergraduate participants (75 female, 114male) from a Midwestern university completed an online survey. Of the 189 undergraduates, 116 (61.4%) identified as non-binge-drinkers and 73 (38.6%) as binge-drinkers. Results showed that psychological flexibility predicted binge-drinking behavior. More specifically, higher degrees of psychological flexibility decreased the likelihood that individuals would engage in binge-drinking behavior. Interactions also emerged between binge-drinking quantity and psychological flexibility on alcohol-related consequences. Similarly, psychological flexibility was shown to buffer the relationship between binge-drinking status and HRQoL. Demographic and psychosocial differences also emerged across binge-drinking severity groups and outcome measures.
Ph.D. in Psychology, July 2014
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- Title
- ASSESSMENT OF THE VALIDITY AND RELIABILITY OF THE ROMANTIC RELATIONAL INVENTORY: A MEASURE OF THE DEGREE OF ADAPTIVENENESS WITHIN THE DECLARATIVE ASPECTS OF ROMANTIC RELATIONAL SCHEMA
- Creator
- Grix, Bethany
- Date
- 2011-11-28, 2011-12
- Description
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A measure was developed to quantify an individual’s romantic relational schema, after conducting a literature review of the variables to which...
Show moreA measure was developed to quantify an individual’s romantic relational schema, after conducting a literature review of the variables to which it was related. The measure was designed to assess comprehensively the dimensions and degree of adaptiveness within this important construct. This new measure, the Romanic Relational Inventory (RRI), was subject to psychometric analyses and a final 93 item measure was derived from the factor analyses on 104 original items. The RRI was shown to be a reliable and valid measure of the descriptive components of romantic relational schema as demonstrated by the measures of external validity and reliability analyses. A series of Experimental Factor Analyses suggested that the initial single factor hypothesized domains were supported (i.e., Relationship Components; Expectations of Relationship Behaviors; Partner Components, which included two sub-domains: Partner Traits and the Congruence of Self with Other; and Global Perceptions of Romantic Relationships). The results suggest that the RRI may be a reliable and valid multidimensional measure, with distinct yet overlapping dimensions or sub-constructs.
M.S. in Psychology, December 2011
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