Grynberg Delphine, de Timary Philippe, Van Heuverswijn Aude, Maurage Pierre
Univ. Lille, UMR 9193 - SCALab - Sciences Cognitives et Sciences Affectives, F-59000, Lille, France.
Laboratory for Experimental Psychopathology, Psychological Sciences Research Institute, Université catholique de Louvain, 10 Place C. Mercier, B-1348, Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium; Department of Adult Psychiatry, Saint-Luc Academic Hospital, 10 Avenue Hippocrate, B-1200, Brussels, Belgium; Institute of Neuroscience, Université catholique de Louvain, 10 Avenue Hippocrate, B-1200, Belgium.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2017 Oct 1;179:78-82. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2017.06.030. Epub 2017 Jul 24.
Prior research has repeatedly shown that alcohol-dependence is associated with interpersonal difficulties. However, guilt and shame, two crucial self-evaluative emotions triggered by the transgression of social norms, have not been explored among alcohol-dependent individuals despite their important role in psychiatric disorders. The present study thus aimed to investigate whether alcohol-dependence is associated with greater proneness to negatively evaluate one's own behaviors (guilt) or the entire self (shame).
25 alcohol-dependent individuals (ADI) and 25 matched healthy individuals completed a scenario-based inventory (TOSCA-3), requiring from participants to rate the extent they will react to each scenario in terms of (contextualized) guilt and shame. Participants also completed a list of adjectives related to the frequency at which they generally experience (uncontextualized) guilt and shame (PFQ-2).
When controlling for possible confounds (i.e., depression and anxiety), ADI reported greater proneness to experience guilt at the TOSCA-3 (η=.22) compared to healthy individuals.
This study is the first to show that alcohol-dependence is associated with greater contextualized guilt-proneness, i.e., negative evaluation of one's own behaviors that transgress social norms. Therefore, these results reinforce the relevance of social disorders in alcohol-dependence and indicate that ADI may benefit of therapeutic programs to avoid a generalization of guilt towards shame.
先前的研究反复表明,酒精依赖与人际交往困难有关。然而,内疚和羞耻这两种由违反社会规范引发的关键自我评估情绪,在酒精依赖个体中尚未得到探索,尽管它们在精神疾病中具有重要作用。因此,本研究旨在调查酒精依赖是否与更倾向于对自己的行为(内疚)或整个自我(羞耻)进行负面评价有关。
25名酒精依赖个体(ADI)和25名匹配的健康个体完成了一个基于情景的量表(TOSCA - 3),要求参与者根据(情境化的)内疚和羞耻程度对每个情景的反应进行评分。参与者还完成了一份与他们通常体验(非情境化的)内疚和羞耻频率相关的形容词列表(PFQ - 2)。
在控制可能的混杂因素(即抑郁和焦虑)后,与健康个体相比,ADI在TOSCA - 3量表上报告有更高的内疚倾向(η = 0.22)。
本研究首次表明,酒精依赖与更高的情境化内疚倾向有关,即对违反社会规范的自身行为进行负面评价。因此,这些结果强化了社会障碍在酒精依赖中的相关性,并表明ADI可能受益于治疗方案,以避免内疚泛化为羞耻。