Pluralistic ignorance and college student perceptions of gender-specific alcohol norms. |
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Authors: | Jerry Suls Peter Green |
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Affiliation: | University Iowa, Dept of Psychology, Iowa City, IA 52242, USA. jerry-suls@uiowa.edu |
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Abstract: | Students' perceived norms and personal concern about alcohol use were examined in 4 (N=971) experiments. Men reported that same-sex peers were less concerned about campus alcohol practices than themselves or female students; women believed that they were more concerned about campus alcohol practices than both same- and opposite-sex peers (Experiments 1 and 2). Additional evidence suggested that students were not merely engaging in impression management. Men reported more social pressure to drink and greater embarrassment about expressing drinking-related concerns; women expected more severe consequences if they drank excessively (Experiment 3). A male student (vs female student) expressing concerns about alcohol was believed to experience greater difficulties fitting in (Experiment 4). Implications for peer influence and drug use intervention are discussed. |
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