Alcohol-related implicit (preconscious) cognitive processes are established  and unique predictors of alcohol use, but most research in this area has focused  on alcohol-related implicit cognition and anxiety. This study extends this work  into the area of depressed mood by testing a cognitive model that combines  traditional explicit (conscious and considered) beliefs, implicit  alcohol-related memory associations (AMAs), and self-reported drinking  behavior.
Using a sample of 106 university students, depressed mood was manipulated  using a musical mood induction procedure immediately prior to completion of  implicit then explicit alcohol-related cognition measures. A bootstrapped  two-group (weak/strong expectancies of negative affect and tension reduction)  structural equation model was used to examine how mood changes and  alcohol-related memory associations varied across groups.
Expectancies of negative affect moderated the association of depressed mood  and AMAs, but there was no such association for tension reduction  expectancy.
Subtle mood changes may unconsciously trigger alcohol-related memories in  vulnerable individuals. Results have implications for addressing subtle  fluctuations in depressed mood among young adults at risk of alcohol  problems.
Request Reprint E-Mail:   a.kelly@uq.edu.au 
 
  
