V. Bede Agocha
University of Connecticut
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Featured researches published by V. Bede Agocha.
Journal of Personality | 2000
M. Lynne Cooper; V. Bede Agocha; Melanie Skaggs Sheldon
The present study tested a motivational model in which personality influences on risky behaviors were hypothesized to be primarily indirectly mediated, by shaping the nature and quality of emotional experience as well as characteristic styles of coping with these emotions. This model was tested in a representative community sample of 1,666 young adults, aged 18 to 25 years old. Results revealed strong support for the model, indicating that broad traits related to neuroticism and extraversion promote involvement in alcohol use and risky sex via distinct pathways. Neurotic individuals were prone to engage in risky behaviors as a way to cope with aversive mood states, whereas extraverted individuals were more likely to engage in risky behaviors as a way to enhance positive affective experience. In contrast, impulsivity directly predicted some forms of risk taking, and interacted with extraversion and neuroticism to predict motives for risky behaviors. The model provides a highly general though not complete account of risky behaviors.
The Journal of Positive Psychology | 2010
Alan S. Waterman; Seth J. Schwartz; Byron L. Zamboanga; Russell D. Ravert; Michelle K. Williams; V. Bede Agocha; Su Yeong Kim; M. Brent Donnellan
The Questionnaire for Eudaimonic Well-Being (QEWB) was developed to measure well-being in a manner consistent with how it is conceptualized in eudaimonist philosophy. Aspects of eudaimonic well-being assessed by the QEWB include self-discovery, perceived development of ones best potentials, a sense of purpose and meaning in life, intense involvement in activities, investment of significant effort, and enjoyment of activities as personally expressive. The QEWB was administered to two large, ethnically diverse samples of college students drawn from multiple sites across the United States. A three-part evaluation of the instrument was conducted: (1) evaluating psychometric properties, (2) comparing QEWB scores across gender, age, ethnicity, family income, and family structure, and (3) assessing the convergent, discriminant, construct, and incremental validity of the QEWB. Six hypotheses relating QEWB scores to identity formation, personality traits, and positive and negative psychological functioning were evaluated. The internal consistency of the scale was high and results of independent CFAs indicated that the QEWB items patterned onto a common factor. The distribution of scores approximated a normal curve. Demographic variables were found to predict only small proportions of QEWB score variability. Support for the hypotheses tested provides evidence for the validity of the QEWB as an instrument for assessing eudaimonic well-being. Implications for theory and future research directions are discussed.
Journal of Abnormal Psychology | 2008
M. Lynne Cooper; Jennifer L. Krull; V. Bede Agocha; Mindy E. Flanagan; Holly K. Orcutt; Shelly Grabe; Kurt H. Dermen; Maudette Jackson
Using data from a biracial community sample of adolescents, the present study examined trajectories of alcohol use and abuse over a 15-year period, from adolescence into young adulthood, as well as the extent to which these trajectories were differentially predicted by coping and enhancement motives for alcohol use among the 2 groups. Coping and enhancement motivations (M. L. Cooper, 1994) refer to the strategic use of alcohol to regulate negative and positive emotions, respectively. Results showed that Black and White youth follow distinct alcohol trajectories from adolescence into young adulthood and that these trajectories are differentially rooted in the regulation of negative and positive emotions. Among Black drinkers, coping motives assessed in adolescence more strongly forecast differences in alcohol involvement into their early 30s, whereas enhancement motives more strongly forecast differences among White drinkers. Results of the present study suggest that different models may be needed to account for drinking behavior among Blacks and Whites and that different approaches may prove maximally effective in reducing heavy or problem drinking among the 2 groups.
Journal of Sex Research | 2014
Melina Bersamin; Byron L. Zamboanga; Seth J. Schwartz; M. Brent Donnellan; Monika Hudson; Robert S. Weisskirch; Su Yeong Kim; V. Bede Agocha; Susan Krauss Whitbourne; S. Jean Caraway
A multiethnic sample of single, heterosexual, emerging-adult college students (N = 3,907) ages 18 to 25, from 30 institutions across the United States, participated in a study about identity, culture, psychological well-being, and risky behaviors. Given ongoing debates about the connection between casual sex and psychological adjustment, in the current study we assessed the cross-sectional association of participation in casual sex with psychological well-being and distress. A greater proportion of men (18.6%) compared to women (7.4%) reported having had casual sex in the month prior to assessment. Structural equation modeling indicated that casual sex was negatively associated with well-being (ß = .20, p < .001) and positively associated with psychological distress (ß = .16, p < .001). Gender did not moderate these associations. For emerging-adult college students, engaging in casual sex may elevate risk for negative psychological outcomes.
Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin | 1999
V. Bede Agocha; M. Lynne Cooper
An experimental study investigated the combined effects of participant’s gender and an opposite-sex target’s sexual history (SH) and physical attractiveness (PA) on the perceived desirability of that target, participant’s willingness to exchange personal information, intention to have sex, perceived riskiness, and intentions to engage in safer-sex behaviors should intercourse occur with the target. A total of 280 college students (140 men, 140 women) completed self-administered questionnaires immediately after viewing the target’s photograph and biographic information. Results indicated that participants, especially men, overrelied on irrelevant partner characteristics such as PA and underused the more relevant SH information in making judgments about risk and probable future behavior with the target. Supplementary path analyses highlighted the role of desirability of the target as a proximal cause of both lower risk perceptions and weakened intentions to take precautionary actions. The need to more fully address motivational factors in future research and prevention efforts is discussed.
Emerging adulthood | 2013
Alan S. Waterman; Seth J. Schwartz; Sam A. Hardy; Su Yeong Kim; Richard M. Lee; Brian E. Armenta; Susan Krauss Whitbourne; Byron L. Zamboanga; Elissa J. Brown; Michelle K. Williams; V. Bede Agocha
Research indicates making identity commitments on the part of emerging adults is associated with a wide range of psychosocial benefits. Data from a large research collaborative were used to evaluate hypotheses drawn from eudaimonic identity theory that the benefits of commitment are attributable to the quality of the commitments held. Findings from a study with 9,650 students attending 30 colleges and universities replicated previous research indicating the benefits of identity commitments with respect to subjective well-being, psychological well-being, self-esteem, an internal locus of control; and reduced likelihood of symptoms of general anxiety, social anxiety, and depression. However, when a measure of the quality of identity commitments was added to the analyses, results indicated that commitment quality accounted almost entirely for the associations of identity commitments with psychosocial functioning. Identity commitments of low quality were found to be associated with psychological costs rather than benefits. Implications for helping emerging adults distinguish better identity choices are discussed.
Journal of The International Neuropsychological Society | 2003
Cay Anderson-Hanley; Marne L. Sherman; Raine Riggs; V. Bede Agocha; Bruce E. Compas
Sex Roles | 2010
Nicole M. Overstreet; Diane M. Quinn; V. Bede Agocha
Identity | 2012
Seth J. Schwartz; Irene J. K. Park; Que-Lam Huynh; Byron L. Zamboanga; Adriana J. Umaña-Taylor; Richard M. Lee; Liliana Rodriguez; Su Yeong Kim; Susan Kraus Whitbourne; Linda G. Castillo; Robert S. Weisskirch; Alexander T. Vazsonyi; Michelle K. Williams; V. Bede Agocha
Social Psychology of Education | 2018
Crystal L. Park; Michelle K. Williams; Paul R. Hernandez; V. Bede Agocha; Lauren M. Carney; Andrea E. DePetris; Sharon Y. Lee