Correction to Correia and Little (2006).
Citation:
Little, C., & Correia, C. J. (2007). Correction to Correia and Little (2006). Psychology of Addictive Behaviors, 21(2), 254-254.
Abstract:
Reports an error in "Use of a Multiple-Choice Procedure With College Student Drinkers" by Christopher J. Correia and Carrie Little (Psychology of Addictive Behaviors, 2006[Dec], Vol 20[4], 445-452). The article was inadvertently published with the order of authorship reversed. Carrie Little was the first author on this article; Christopher J. Correia was the second author. (The following abstract of the original article appeared in record 2006-22487-009.) The Multiple-Choice Procedure (MCP) was developed to investigate the relationship between drug preferences and alternative reinforcers. The current studies were designed to validate survey and laboratory versions of the MCP with college student drinkers. In Study 1, 320 undergraduates with a recent history of alcohol consumption used a survey version of the MCP to make 120 discrete hypothetical choices between two amounts of alcohol and escalating amounts of money delivered immediately or after a 1-week delay. In Study 2, 21 undergraduates completed a laboratory version of the MCP to make 120 discrete choices involving real alcohol and monetary payments. Responses to both versions of the MCP were related to measures of alcohol use and varied as a function of delay associated with the money choice. Responses to the survey version of the MCP also varied as a function of the amount of alcohol hypothetically available. The results of the 2 studies are consistent with a behavioral choice perspective of alcohol use, which focuses on preferences in the context of competing alternative reinforcers.

