Leigh B C
Oregon State University, Corvallis.
J Stud Alcohol. 1989 Sep;50(5):432-40. doi: 10.15288/jsa.1989.50.432.
Research on expectations about the effects of alcohol has shown these expectancies to be related to drinking habits. Expectancies can be seen as components of attitudes toward alcohol, which are also related to drinking behavior. The relationships between attitudes, expectancies, and self-reported drinking behavior were examined. Three different measures of expectancies were included in order to compare their relative utility in predicting drinking variables. Two of the three measures performed equally in prediction. Although expectancies added significantly to explained variance in drinking when attitudes were controlled for, the increment was quite small. The improvement in prediction was larger when the measures of attitudes and behavior lacked correspondence. The results suggest that attention to the relationships between attitudes and expectancies can inform further research in this area.
关于酒精作用预期的研究表明,这些预期与饮酒习惯有关。预期可被视为对酒精态度的组成部分,而这些态度也与饮酒行为相关。研究了态度、预期与自我报告饮酒行为之间的关系。纳入了三种不同的预期测量方法,以比较它们在预测饮酒变量方面的相对效用。三种测量方法中的两种在预测方面表现相当。尽管在控制态度后,预期对饮酒解释方差有显著增加,但增加量相当小。当态度和行为测量缺乏对应性时,预测的改善更大。结果表明,关注态度与预期之间的关系可为该领域的进一步研究提供信息。