Ramirez Jason J, Olin Cecilia C, Lindgren Kristen P
Center for the Study of Health & Risk Behaviors (CSHRB), University of Washington, School of Medicine, Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, 1100 NE 45th Street, Suite 300, Seattle, WA 98105, United States.
Center for the Study of Health & Risk Behaviors (CSHRB), University of Washington, School of Medicine, Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, 1100 NE 45th Street, Suite 300, Seattle, WA 98105, United States.
Addict Behav. 2017 Sep;72:41-44. doi: 10.1016/j.addbeh.2017.03.014. Epub 2017 Mar 23.
Two variations of the Implicit Association Test (IAT), the Drinking Identity IAT and the Alcohol Identity IAT, assess implicit associations held in memory between one's identity and alcohol-related constructs. Both have been shown to predict numerous drinking outcomes, but these IATs have never been directly compared to one another. The purpose of this study was to compare these IATs and evaluate their incremental predictive validity. US undergraduate students (N=64, 50% female, mean age=21.98years) completed the Drinking Identity IAT, the Alcohol Identity IAT, an explicit measure of drinking identity, as well as measures of typical alcohol consumption and hazardous drinking. When evaluated in separate regression models that controlled for explicit drinking identity, results indicated that the Drinking Identity IAT and the Alcohol Identity IAT were significant, positive predictors of typical alcohol consumption, and that the Drinking Identity IAT, but not the Alcohol Identity IAT, was a significant predictor of hazardous drinking. When evaluated in the same regression models, the Drinking Identity IAT, but not the Alcohol Identity IAT, was significantly associated with typical and hazardous drinking. These results suggest that the Drinking Identity IAT and Alcohol Identity IAT are related but not redundant. Moreover, given that the Drinking Identity IAT, but not the Alcohol Identity IAT, incrementally predicted variance in drinking outcomes, identification with drinking behavior and social groups, as opposed to identification with alcohol itself, may be an especially strong predictor of drinking outcomes.
内隐联想测验(IAT)有两种变体,即饮酒身份IAT和酒精身份IAT,用于评估个体记忆中身份与酒精相关概念之间的内隐联想。研究表明,这两种测验都能预测多种饮酒结果,但它们从未被直接相互比较过。本研究旨在比较这两种IAT,并评估它们的增量预测效度。美国本科生(N = 64,50%为女性,平均年龄 = 21.98岁)完成了饮酒身份IAT、酒精身份IAT、一项饮酒身份的显性测量,以及典型酒精消费量和危险饮酒量的测量。在控制显性饮酒身份的单独回归模型中进行评估时,结果表明,饮酒身份IAT和酒精身份IAT是典型酒精消费量的显著正向预测指标,并且饮酒身份IAT(而非酒精身份IAT)是危险饮酒的显著预测指标。在相同回归模型中进行评估时,饮酒身份IAT(而非酒精身份IAT)与典型饮酒和危险饮酒显著相关。这些结果表明,饮酒身份IAT和酒精身份IAT相关但并非冗余。此外,鉴于饮酒身份IAT(而非酒精身份IAT)能增量预测饮酒结果的方差,与饮酒行为和社会群体的认同,而非与酒精本身的认同,可能是饮酒结果的一个特别强的预测指标。