On the Effectiveness of Social Norms Intervention in College Drinking: The Roles of Identity Verification and Peer Influence
Authored by Jason Martinez, Ben G Fitzpatrick, Elizabeth Polidan, Ekaterini Angelis
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1111/acer.12919
Sponsors:
United States National Institutes of Health (NIH)
Platforms:
MATLAB
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Background: The application of social norms theory in the study of
college drinking centers on the ideas that incorrect perceptions of
drinking norms encourage problematic drinking behavior and that
correcting misperceptions can mitigate problems. The design and
execution of social norms interventions can be improved with a deeper
understanding of causal mechanisms connecting misperception to drinking
behavior.
Methods: We develop an agent-based computational simulation that uses
identity control theory and peer influence (PI) to model interactions
that affect drinking. Using data from the College Alcohol Survey and
Social Norms Marketing Research Project, we inform model parameters for
agent drinking identities and perceptions. We simulate social norms
campaigns that reach progressively larger fractions of the student
population, and we consider the strength of the campaign in terms of
changing student perception and resulting behavior.
Results: We observe a general reduction in heavy episodic drinking (HED)
as students are affected by the intervention. As campaigns reached
larger fractions of students, the reduction rate diminishes, in some
cases actually making a slight reverse. The way in which students ``take
the message to heart{''} can have a significant impact as well: The
psychological factors involved in identity control and PI have both
positive and negative effects on HED rates. With whom agents associate
at drinking events also impacts drinking behavior and intervention
effectiveness.
Conclusions: Simulations suggest that reducing misperception can reduce
HED. When agents adhere strongly to identity verification and when
misperceptions affect identity appraisals, social norms campaigns can
bring about large reductions. PI, self-monitoring, and socializing with
like-drinking peers appear to moderate the effect.
Tags
health
Prevention
Perception
Self
Multisite randomized-trial
Binge-drinking
Marketing campaigns
Alcohol-consumption
Student drinking
Perceived norms