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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2021 May 1.
Published in final edited form as: Psychopharmacology (Berl). 2020 Mar 31;237(5):1557–1575. doi: 10.1007/s00213-020-05480-5

Table 3.

Indirect and Total Effects for Affect-Related Variables Predicting Nighttime Alcohol Use

Variables/Path b SE p value
Daytime Alcohol-Related Attention Bias Model
Within-Person Indirect Effects
 NA → Daytime AAB → Alcohol Use 0.001 0.002 .630
 PA → Daytime AAB → Alcohol Use 0.005 0.005 .333
 DME → Daytime AAB → Alcohol Use −0.004 0.005 .396
Within-Person Total Effects
 PA → Alcohol Use 0.207 0.060 .001
Between-Person Indirect Effects
 NA → Daytime AAB → Alcohol Use 0.002 0.002 .815
 PA → Daytime AAB → Alcohol Use 0.010 0.005 .766
 DME → Daytime AAB → Alcohol Use 0.001 0.005 .904
Between-Person Total Effects
 PA → Alcohol Use −0.236 0.140 .094
Nighttime Alcohol-Related Attention Bias Model
Within-Person Indirect Effects
 NA → Nighttime AAB → Alcohol Use −0.005 0.003 .161
 PA → Nighttime AAB → Alcohol Use 0.008 0.005 .088
 DME → Nighttime AAB → Alcohol Use 0.000 0.004 .982
Within-Person Total Effects
 PA → Alcohol Use 0.190 0.065 .004
Between-Person Indirect Effects
NANighttime AABAlcohol Use 0.002 0.015 .815
PANighttime AABAlcohol Use 0.034 0.026 .766
DMENighttime AABAlcohol Use −0.032 0.028 .904
Between-Person Total Effects
PAAlcohol Use −0.311 0.089 .000

Note. N = 92. Level 1 observations = 1,709 person-days. NA = negative affect. PA = positive affect. DME = difficulty managing emotions.