AI Article Synopsis

  • The study compared college students who misused prescription stimulants with those who did not, examining their use of study strategies.
  • Researchers used logistic regression to investigate if poor or few study strategies led to stimulant misuse, hypothesizing that effective studying would lower misuse odds.
  • Results showed that having more study strategies and valuing school correlated with increased stimulant misuse, suggesting students use stimulants to enhance their already effective study habits rather than compensate for poor ones.

Article Abstract

The current study examined the regular use of study strategies between college students who misused prescription stimulants ( = 36) and college students who did not misuse prescription stimulants ( = 298) in an undergraduate sample. 334 college students at a large, Midwestern university. Using logistic regression, we examined whether students who misused prescription stimulants did so to compensate for poor study strategies and/or a lack of study strategies overall. We hypothesized that regularly spacing studying, using more study strategies, and using more effective study strategies would predict lower odds of prescription stimulant misuse among students. In contrast, we hypothesized that using more effective study strategies would predict higher odds of prescription stimulant misuse. Results indicated that a greater number of total study strategies and effective study strategies, and higher importance of school predicted higher odds of prescription stimulant misuse. Thus, students may not be misusing prescription stimulants as a substitute for effective studying but, rather, to augment effective study habits.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07448481.2020.1785472DOI Listing

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