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Dive into the research topics where Ross E. O'Hara is active.

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Featured researches published by Ross E. O'Hara.


Emotion | 2014

Emotional stress-reactivity and positive affect among college students: The role of depression history

Ross E. O'Hara; Stephen Armeli; Marcella H. Boynton; Howard Tennen

Multiple theories posit that people with a history of depression are at higher risk for a depressive episode than people who have never experienced depression, which may be partly due to differences in stress-reactivity. In addition, both the dynamic model of affect and the broaden-and-build theory suggest that stress and positive affect interact to predict negative affect, but this moderation has never been tested in the context of depression history. The current study used multilevel modeling to examine these issues among 1,549 college students with or without a history of depression. Students completed a 30-day online diary study in which they reported daily their perceived stress, positive affect, and negative affect (including depression, anxiety, and hostility). On days characterized by higher than usual stress, students with a history of depression reported greater decreases in positive affect and greater increases in depressed affect than students with no history. Furthermore, the relations between daily stress and both depressed and anxious affect were moderated by daily positive affect among students with remitted depression. These results indicate that students with a history of depression show greater stress-reactivity even when in remission, which may place them at greater risk for recurrence. These individuals may also benefit more from positive affect on higher stress days despite being less likely to experience positive affect on such days. The current findings have various implications both clinically and for research on stress, mood, and depression. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2014 APA, all rights reserved).


Basic and Applied Social Psychology | 2011

Standing Out From the Crowd: How Comparison to Prototypes Can Decrease Health-Risk Behavior in Young Adults

David J. Lane; Frederick X. Gibbons; Ross E. O'Hara; Meg Gerrard

This research tested whether social comparison can encourage adolescents to make less risky health decisions. Two studies demonstrated that when young adults compare themselves with drinkers, they become less willing to drink if they perceive dissimilarity between themselves and those drinkers. When participants in Study 1 compared with someone who drinks regularly, their perceived similarity to prototypical drinkers was positively related to their willingness to drink. In Study 2, participants identified or contrasted themselves with prototypical drinkers; those encouraged to contrast who also felt less similar to the prototype reported less willingness to drink. These studies support the prototype/willingness models assumption that prototypes affect willingness to drink through social comparison.


Anxiety Stress and Coping | 2016

Episode-specific drinking-to-cope motivation and next-day stress-reactivity

Stephen Armeli; Ross E. O'Hara; Jon Covault; Denise M. Scott; Howard Tennen

Background: Research consistently shows drinking-to-cope (DTC) motivation is uniquely associated with drinking-related problems. We furthered this line of research by examining whether DTC motivation is predictive of processes indicative of poor emotion regulation. Specifically, we tested whether nighttime levels of episode-specific DTC motivation, controlling for drinking level, were associated with intensified affective reactions to stress the following day (i.e. stress-reactivity). Design and Methods: We used a micro-longitudinal design to test this hypothesis in two college student samples from demographically distinct institutions: a large, rural state university (N = 1421; 54% female) and an urban historically Black college/university (N = 452; 59% female). Results: In both samples the within-person association between daily stress and negative affect on days following drinking episodes was stronger in the positive direction when previous nights drinking was characterized by relatively higher levels of DTC motivation. We also found evidence among students at the state university that average levels of DTC motivation moderated the daily stress-negative affect association. Conclusions: Findings are consistent with the notion that DTC motivation confers a unique vulnerability that affects processes associated with emotion regulation.


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 2012

The Erosive Effects of Racism: Reduced Self-control Mediates the Relation between Perceived Racial Discrimination and Substance Use in African American Adolescents

Frederick X. Gibbons; Ross E. O'Hara; Michelle L. Stock; Meg Gerrard; Chih-Yuan Weng; Thomas A. Wills


Palliative & Supportive Care | 2010

Impact on caregiver burden of a patient-focused palliative care intervention for patients with advanced cancer

Ross E. O'Hara; Jay G. Hull; Kathleen Doyle Lyons; Marie Bakitas; Mark T. Hegel; Zhongze Li; Tim A. Ahles


Psychology of Addictive Behaviors | 2012

Coping with Racial Discrimination: The Role of Substance Use

Meg Gerrard; Michelle L. Stock; Megan E. Roberts; Frederick X. Gibbons; Ross E. O'Hara; Chih-Yuan Weng; Thomas A. Wills


Health Education Research | 2010

Self-control, diet concerns and eater prototypes influence fatty foods consumption of adolescents in three countries

Joanne H. Gerrits; Ross E. O'Hara; Bettina Pikó; Frederick X. Gibbons; Denise de Ridder; Noémi Keresztes; Shanmukh V. Kamble; John de Wit


Psychology of Addictive Behaviors | 2015

College students' drinking motives and social-contextual factors: Comparing associations across levels of analysis.

Ross E. O'Hara; Stephen Armeli; Howard Tennen


Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs | 2014

A Mediational Model of Racial Discrimination and Alcohol-Related Problems Among African American College Students

Marcella H. Boynton; Ross E. O'Hara; Jonathan Covault; Denise M. Scott; Howard Tennen


Social Science & Medicine | 2013

Specificity of early movie effects on adolescent sexual behavior and alcohol use

Ross E. O'Hara; Frederick X. Gibbons; Zhigang Li; Meg Gerrard; James D. Sargent

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Howard Tennen

University of Connecticut Health Center

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Stephen Armeli

Fairleigh Dickinson University

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Marcella H. Boynton

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Meg Gerrard

University of Connecticut

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Michelle L. Stock

George Washington University

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