How Individuals Feel About the Past,Present, and Future Bears Little Relation to Alcohol-Related Problems,Anxiety, and Depression: A Person-Centered Analysis in a University Sample |
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Authors: | Michael T. McKay James R. Andretta Jon C. Cole |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Psychological Sciences, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, United Kingdom;2. Child Guidance Clinic, Superior Court of the District of Columbia, Washington, DC, USA |
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Abstract: | Previous studies using bivariate or correlational analyses have established a relationship between alcohol use, symptoms of anxiety and depression, and scores on a range of temporal psychology measures. Temporal psychology measures variously assess the cognitive or affective (or in some cases, both) engagement with the past, present, and future. Although developed and validated in adolescents, recent research has suggested that the Time Attitudes Scale is internally consistent and reliable in adults also. The present study is the first to apply a person-centered approach to assessing the relationship between scores on the Time Attitudes Scale and symptoms of anxiety, depression, and alcohol-related problems in adults. Participants were recruited from a University in England. Results support the validity and internal consistency of the Time Attitudes Scale. Meaningful time attitudes profiles emerged, however, taking the sample size into account, the only substantive finding showed that those with a negative time attitudes profile scored higher on depressive symptomatology than those with a positive profile. While elsewhere, Zimbardo Time Perspective Inventory scores have been shown to be meaningfully related to anxiety, depression and alcohol use, the present study questions the degree to which the affective dimension of temporal psychology is driving that relationship. |
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Keywords: | Time attitudes factorial validity anxiety depression alcohol |
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