Fairbairn Catharine E
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Psychol Addict Behav. 2017 May;31(3):255-264. doi: 10.1037/adb0000264. Epub 2017 Mar 13.
Drinking in unfamiliar social settings has long been linked to alcohol problems. A large body of indirect evidence has accumulated to suggest that alcohol's rewarding subjective effects-both tension relieving and positive-mood enhancing-will be magnified when it is consumed among strangers versus among familiar individuals. But the link between social familiarity and alcohol reward has never been examined. I conducted a meta-analysis of 21 alcohol-administration studies featuring social context (total N = 2,046), examining the effects of alcohol on self-reports of mood and social outcomes and on behaviors in the context of social interactions. Studies were classified according to whether participants involved in the social interaction were previously acquainted prior to study participation (familiarity condition) and also according to other characteristics of the social interaction and alcohol-dosing procedure. Results of random effects metaregression models revealed a significant effect of familiarity in moderating alcohol response, Q(1) = 9.80, p = .0002. Alcohol-related social-emotional enhancement was significantly larger when studies examined interactions among strangers (d = .48, 95% confidence interval [CI: .34, .61]) versus when they examined interactions among familiar individuals (d = .09, 95% CI [-.12, .29]). Of note, in analyses examining self-reports and behaviors separately, findings indicated that alcohol consumption leads to similar behavioral disinhibition across familiar and unfamiliar contexts but that the consequences of this disinhibition for internal subjective experience may differ depending on familiarity. Overall, results suggest that individuals may gain more subjective reward from alcohol in unfamiliar social contexts, pointing to familiarity as a potentially promising line of inquiry for research examining mechanisms of risk for alcohol problems. (PsycINFO Database Record
长期以来,在不熟悉的社交场合饮酒一直与酒精问题相关。大量间接证据表明,酒精带来的主观奖赏效应——缓解紧张和提升积极情绪——在与陌生人一起饮酒时比与熟悉的人一起饮酒时会被放大。但社交熟悉度与酒精奖赏之间的联系从未被研究过。我对21项涉及社交情境的酒精给药研究进行了荟萃分析(样本总量N = 2046),考察了酒精对情绪和社交结果的自我报告以及社交互动情境下行为的影响。研究根据参与社交互动的参与者在研究参与之前是否相识(熟悉度条件)以及社交互动和酒精给药程序的其他特征进行分类。随机效应元回归模型的结果显示,熟悉度在调节酒精反应方面有显著效应,Q(1) = 9.80,p = .0002。当研究考察陌生人之间的互动时,与酒精相关的社交情绪增强显著更大(d = .48,95%置信区间[CI: .34, .61]),而当研究考察熟悉的人之间的互动时(d = .09,95%置信区间[-.12, .29])。值得注意的是,在分别考察自我报告和行为的分析中,结果表明,在熟悉和不熟悉的情境中,饮酒都会导致类似的行为去抑制,但这种去抑制对内部主观体验的影响可能因熟悉度而异。总体而言,结果表明,在不熟悉的社交情境中,个体可能从酒精中获得更多的主观奖赏,这表明熟悉度是研究酒精问题风险机制的一个潜在有前景的研究方向。(PsycINFO数据库记录)