In this study we examine relationships between self-structure and known precursors for alcohol problems in 9- to 12-year-old primarily black and Latino youths (N = 79).
Parental alcohol problems and being female predicted few positive and many negative self-cognitions and a future-oriented self-cognition related to alcohol (“drinking possible self”).
Nineteen percent of the sample reported ever drinking, but 40% of those with a “drinking possible self” reported ever drinking. Compared to never drinkers, youths who reported ever drinking had fewer self-cognitions.
The self-structure may be an important mechanism through which parental alcohol problems and antisocial behavior lead to early alcohol use, and a viable target of interventions aimed at preventing early alcohol use.
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