Sevincer A Timur, Oettingen Gabriele
Department of Psychology, University of Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany.
J Abnorm Psychol. 2009 Aug;118(3):623-33. doi: 10.1037/a0016199.
According to alcohol-myopia theory (C. M. Steele & R. A. Josephs, 1990), alcohol leads individuals to disproportionally focus on the most salient aspects of a situation and to ignore peripheral information. The authors hypothesized that alcohol leads individuals to strongly commit to their goals without considering information about the probability of goal attainment. In Study 1, participants named their most important interpersonal goal, indicated their expectations of successfully attaining it, and then consumed either alcohol or a placebo. In contrast to participants who consumed a placebo, intoxicated participants felt strongly committed to their goals despite low expectations of attaining them. In Study 2, goal-directed actions were measured over time. Once sober again, intoxicated participants with low expectations did not follow up on their strong commitments. Apparently, when prospects are bleak, alcohol produces empty goal commitments, as commitments are not based on individuals' expectations of attaining their goals and do not foster goal striving over time.
根据酒精近视理论(C.M. 斯蒂尔和R.A. 约瑟夫斯,1990年),酒精会导致个体过度关注情境中最突出的方面,而忽略周边信息。作者推测,酒精会使个体坚定地致力于自己的目标,而不考虑有关目标实现可能性的信息。在研究1中,参与者说出他们最重要的人际目标,表明他们对成功实现该目标的期望,然后饮用酒精或安慰剂。与饮用安慰剂的参与者相比,尽管实现目标的期望较低,但醉酒的参与者仍强烈致力于他们的目标。在研究2中,对目标导向行为进行了长期测量。再次清醒后,期望较低的醉酒参与者并没有跟进他们坚定的承诺。显然,当前景黯淡时,酒精会产生空洞的目标承诺,因为这些承诺并非基于个体对实现目标的期望,也不会随着时间的推移促进目标追求。