Abstract

Exposure to online drinking on social media is associated with real-life alcohol consumption. Building on the Theory of planned behavior, the current study substantially adds to this line of research by identifying the predictors of sharing drunk references on social media. Based on a cross-sectional survey among 1639 adolescents with a mean age of 15 (59% female), this study compares and discusses multiple regression tree algorithms predicting the sharing of drunk references. More specifically, this paper compares the accuracy of classification and regression tree, bagging, random forest and extreme gradient boosting algorithms. The analysis indicates that four concepts are central to predicting adolescents’ sharing of drunk references: (1) exposure to them on social media; (2) the perceived injunctive norms of the mother towards alcohol consumption; (3) the perceived descriptive norms of best friends towards alcohol consumption; and (4) willingness to drink alcohol. The most accurate results were obtained using extreme gradient boosting. This study provides theoretical, practical, and methodological conclusions. It shows that maternal norms toward alcohol consumption are a central predictor for sharing drunk references. Therefore, future media literacy interventions should take an ecological perspective. In addition, this analysis indicates that regression trees are an advantageous method in youth research, combining accurate predictions with straightforward interpretations.

Highlights

  • A substantial number of studies documented the association between social media use and alcohol consumption [1,2,3,4]

  • Adolescents indicated that they share drunk references never or less than once per month (0 corresponds to “never”, 1 to “less than once per month” and 2 to “several times per month”), they are exposed more often

  • This study showed that maternal injunctive norms towards alcohol consumption, the perceived descriptive norms of best friends towards alcohol consumption, and the willingness to drink alcohol were the most influential concepts in predicting adolescents’

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Summary

Introduction

A substantial number of studies documented the association between social media use and alcohol consumption [1,2,3,4]. These studies show that adolescents’ interaction with media content depicting alcohol and drunkenness is a meaningful marker for offline drinking, which poses a severe threat to health during adolescence and young adulthood [2,5,6]. Recent research has mainly looked at the content of these messages and their effects [2,10,11,12]. In the factors determining the sharing of these messages

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