Journal article
The Roles of Alcohol-Related Self Statements in Social Drinking
Substance Use and Misuse, Vol.22(10), pp.905-915
1987
PMID: 3692632
Abstract
Recent literature showed that expectancies or cognitions have been proposed as a major factor in influencing the amount of alcohol an individual consumes and the behavioral consequences following consumption.
However, how alcohol expectancies influence alcohol consumption is unclear; this paper reports two studies of the relationship. Study I examined the relationship between alcohol consumption and alcohol-related positive and negative self-statements in 110 social drinkers. The results showed that, in a nondrinking situation, the alcohol expectancies and variables measuring consumption and alcoholrelated problems were correlated. Also, subjects who perceived their "alcoholic sets" as negative consumed more than those who perceived theirs as positive. Study II investigated changes in self-statement responding in 8 light and 8 heavy drinkers in a "normal" pub drinking situation.
The results showed that alcohol-dependent self-statements in the light drinkers were relatively stable across time and between drinking and nondrinking environments. However, the alcohol-dependent self-statements of heavy drinkers became more negative during the drinking session.
Furthermore, the degree and nature of such changes appeared to be related to alcohol-associated problems and consumption.
Details
- Title
- The Roles of Alcohol-Related Self Statements in Social Drinking
- Authors
- Tian P. S Oei (Author) - University of QueenslandRoss Young (Author) - University of Otago
- Publication details
- Substance Use and Misuse, Vol.22(10), pp.905-915
- Publisher
- Taylor & Francis Inc.
- DOI
- 10.3109/10826088709109688
- ISSN
- 1532-2491
- PMID
- 3692632
- Organisation Unit
- Office of the Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Research and Innovation); University of the Sunshine Coast, Queensland
- Language
- English
- Record Identifier
- 99550992602621
- Output Type
- Journal article
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- Domestic collaboration
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- Psychiatry
- Substance Abuse
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