
@article{ref1,
title="The Relationship Between the Quantity of Alcohol Consumed and the Severity of Sexual Assaults Committed by College Men",
journal="Journal of interpersonal violence",
year="2003",
author="McAuslan, Pamela and Clinton-Sherrod, A. M. and Abbey, Antonia and Zawacki, Tina and Buck, Philip O.",
volume="18",
number="7",
pages="798-812",
abstract="Researchers have suggested that intoxicated perpetrators may act more violently than other perpetrators, although empirical findings have been mixed. Past research has focused on whether or not alcohol was consumed, rather than the quantity consumed, and this may explain these inconsistent findings. The authors hypothesized that the quantity of alcohol consumed would have a curvilinear relationship to the severity of the assault. Data were collected from 113 college men who reported that they had committed a sexual assault since the age of 14. The quantity of alcohol that perpetrators consumed during the assault was linearly related to how much aggression they used and was curvilinearly related to the type of sexual assault committed. The quantity of alcohol that victims consumed during the assault was linearly related to the type of sexual assault committed. Strategies for improving assessment of alcohol consumption in sexual assault research are discussed.(Abstract Adapted from Source: Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 2003. Copyright © 2003 by SAGE Publications)College StudentAdult MaleAdult OffenderAdult ViolenceAdult Substance UseMale Substance UseMale OffenderMale ViolenceViolence Against WomenOffender Substance UseAlcohol Related ViolenceAlcohol Use EffectsSubstance Use EffectsSubstance Use-Violence Co-OccurenceSexual Assault OffenderSexual Assault Causes03-04<p />",
language="en",
issn="0886-2605",
doi="",
url="http://dx.doi.org/"
}