Pluralistic ignorance and alcohol use on campus: some consequences of misperceiving the social norm.

@article{Prentice1993PluralisticIA,
  title={Pluralistic ignorance and alcohol use on campus: some consequences of misperceiving the social norm.},
  author={Deborah A. Prentice and D. T. Miller},
  journal={Journal of personality and social psychology},
  year={1993},
  volume={64 2},
  pages={
          243-56
        }
}
  • D. Prentice, D. Miller
  • Published 1 February 1993
  • Psychology, Medicine
  • Journal of personality and social psychology
Four studies examined the relation between college students' own attitudes toward alcohol use and their estimates of the attitudes of their peers. All studies found widespread evidence of pluralistic ignorance: Students believed that they were more uncomfortable with campus alcohol practices than was the average student. Study 2 demonstrated this perceived self-other difference also with respect to one's friends. Study 3 traced attitudes toward drinking over the course of a semester and found… 
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Students who saw the campus norm to be similar to their own attitude were found to drink more heavily, and in more public settings, than students with discrepant attitudes and perceptions.
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