Leigh B C
Alcohol Research Group, Berkeley, California.
Br J Addict. 1990 Jul;85(7):919-28. doi: 10.1111/j.1360-0443.1990.tb03722.x.
Recent psychosocial research on alcohol expectancies--beliefs about the effects of alcohol on behavior, moods and emotions--has suggested that these expectancies mediate not only decisions about drinking but the alcohol effects displayed by those who have been drinking. Results of a study of drinking and sexual behavior showed that individuals of different gender and sexual orientation differed in their beliefs about the effects of alcohol on sexual responding. In addition, expectations of sexual enhancement and disinhibition were related to the initiation of sexual activity and to the proportion of sexual encounters that took place while drinking, and interacted with sex guilt to predict the amount drunk in the most recent sexual encounter. These results suggest that beliefs about the effects of alcohol on sex may affect the characteristics of sexual encounters that involve drinking.
近期关于饮酒预期(即对酒精对行为、情绪和情感影响的信念)的社会心理研究表明,这些预期不仅介导饮酒决策,还介导饮酒者所表现出的酒精效应。一项关于饮酒与性行为的研究结果显示,不同性别和性取向的个体对酒精对性反应影响的信念存在差异。此外,性增强和去抑制的预期与性活动的开始以及饮酒时发生性行为的比例相关,并与性内疚相互作用,以预测最近一次性行为中的饮酒量。这些结果表明,关于酒精对性行为影响的信念可能会影响涉及饮酒的性接触的特征。