Even among those at risk for problematic alcohol use, there is variability  in developmental trajectories of drinking and related problems. 
This prospective  study examined the role of person-environment interactions in increased drinking  during the transition to college.  
The authors followed a sample of  recent high school graduates to test whether protective environmental factors  could delay increases in drinking among those high in trait-level risk factors.
Participants completed Web-based survey
A  sample of 1,784 students in the incoming class of 2004 at a large public United  States university completed high-school and first-semester-of-college  assessments. 
Participants completed self-report measures of  alcohol use, alcohol-related problems, perceived awareness and caring from  parents and other adults, sensation seeking, and impulsivity.
In  the transition to college, high sensation seekers from more protective high  school parental environments increased their alcohol use and problems more than  did other students. Increases in alcohol problems were also high among more  impulsive students from less protective environments. Whereas high sensation  seekers drank equivalently in college regardless of high school perceived  awareness and caring, those who had greater high school perceived awareness and  caring did not experience as many alcohol-related problems in college.
Differences in drinking trajectories may be a function of  person-environment interactions. Risk associated with high sensation seeking may  be masked among adolescents in protective environments, but its emergence in the  college transition predicts increases in alcohol use and related problems.
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