Fairbairn Catharine E, Sayette Michael A, Aalen Odd O, Frigessi Arnoldo
Department of Psychology, University of Pittsburgh.
Oslo Centre for Biostatistics and Epidemiology, Department of Biostatistics, University of Oslo.
Clin Psychol Sci. 2015 Sep;3(5):686-701. doi: 10.1177/2167702614548892. Epub 2014 Sep 26.
Researchers have hypothesized that men gain greater reward from alcohol than women. However, alcohol-administration studies testing participants drinking alone have offered weak support for this hypothesis. Research suggests that social processes may be implicated in gender differences in drinking patterns. We examined the impact of gender and alcohol on "emotional contagion"-a social mechanism central to bonding and cohesion. Social drinkers (360 male, 360 female) consumed alcohol, placebo, or control beverages in groups of three. Social interactions were video recorded, and both Duchenne and non-Duchenne smiling were continuously coded using the . Results revealed that Duchenne smiling (but not non-Duchenne smiling) contagion correlated with self-reported reward and typical drinking patterns. Importantly, Duchenne smiles were significantly less "infectious" among sober male versus female groups, and alcohol eliminated these gender differences in smiling contagion. Findings identify new directions for research exploring social-reward processes in the etiology of alcohol problems.
研究人员推测,男性从酒精中获得的奖赏比女性更多。然而,对独自饮酒的参与者进行的酒精给药研究对这一假设的支持力度较弱。研究表明,社会过程可能与饮酒模式的性别差异有关。我们研究了性别和酒精对“情绪感染”的影响,情绪感染是一种对联系和凝聚力至关重要的社会机制。社交饮酒者(360名男性,360名女性)三人一组饮用酒精饮料、安慰剂或对照饮料。对社交互动进行了视频记录,并使用[具体方法]对杜兴式微笑和非杜兴式微笑进行了持续编码。结果显示,杜兴式微笑(而非非杜兴式微笑)的感染与自我报告的奖赏及典型饮酒模式相关。重要的是,清醒男性组与女性组相比,杜兴式微笑的“传染性”明显更低,而酒精消除了微笑感染中的这些性别差异。研究结果为探索酒精问题病因中的社会奖赏过程指明了新的研究方向。