Personality and Alcohol Use across College: Examining Context-Dependent Pathways toward Alcohol Problems

Subst Use Misuse. 2022;57(9):1450-1461. doi: 10.1080/10826084.2022.2091146. Epub 2022 Jun 28.

Abstract

Background: College life is characterized by marked increases in alcohol consumption. Extraversion and neuroticism are associated with alcohol use problems in college and throughout adulthood, each with alcohol use patterns consistent with an externalizing and internalizing pathway respectively. Students higher in extraversion drink more frequently and consume more alcohol, while neuroticism is paradoxically not consistently associated with elevated alcohol use.

Objective: This study examined whether students higher in neuroticism may drink the day before stressors, namely tests and assignment deadlines.

Method: Multilevel generalized linear models were performed using data from a longitudinal study of first-time, first-year undergraduates assessing alcohol use across four years of college, with daily diary bursts each semester.

Results: Students higher in extraversion had heavier alcohol use and greater alcohol use problems in their fourth year of college. Neuroticism was not associated with drinking behaviors or with drinking before a test or assignment, but was associated with greater fourth year alcohol problems. Students lower in extraversion who reduced heavy drinking the day before academic events had fewer alcohol use problems at the fourth year of college relative to students higher in extraversion.

Conclusions: Students higher in extraversion appear to exhibit a continuity of established alcohol use patterns from adolescence, predisposing them to a more hazardous trajectory of college alcohol use. Characteristics of low extraversion may afford some protection from alcohol-positive college culture. High neuroticism appears associated with a hazardous trajectory of college alcohol use, but continued research into situational factors of alcohol use in high neuroticism is warranted.

Keywords: Psychology; alcohol; college; development; personality.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Adult
  • Alcohol Drinking / epidemiology
  • Alcohol Drinking in College*
  • Alcohol-Related Disorders*
  • Alcoholism*
  • Ethanol
  • Humans
  • Longitudinal Studies
  • Personality
  • Students
  • Universities

Substances

  • Ethanol