Department of Counseling Psychology and Human Services, College of Education, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403-1215, United States.
Office of Mental Health and Suicide Prevention, National Center for PTSD, Dissemination and Training Division, 795 Willow Road (NC-PTSD), Bldg 334, Rm C-122, Menlo Park, CA 94025, United States; Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, School of Medicine, University of Washington, 1100 NE 45th St, Ste 300, Seattle, WA 98105, United States.
Addict Behav. 2020 Jan;100:106111. doi: 10.1016/j.addbeh.2019.106111. Epub 2019 Aug 26.
Both social and drinking behavior have the potential to modify mood. However, if social drinking enhances positive mood and reduces negative mood, as compared to non-drinking social behavior, then interventions to reinforce non-drinking via sober social activity are undermined. Using multilevel modeling analyses, we compared end-of-day mood on drinking days versus non-drinking days, and on days spent with other people as compared to days spent primarily alone. We evaluated the interaction between drinking/non-drinking and social/solitary behavior and assessed whether the effects of social and drinking behavior extended to mood the next day. Participants were 352 college students (53% female; 55% fraternity/sorority membership; mean age 19.7 years) who completed three automated telephone surveys each day during four 14-day intervals over 1 year. Drinking and being social were associated with higher end-of-day positive mood and significantly lower end-of-day negative mood. However, no positive enhancement or negative attenuation effects of alcohol were observed in interaction analyses. Alcohol provided no improvement in mood over-and-above being social at the end of the day or on the following day. However, drinking the previous day significantly reduced next-day positive mood, whereas being social significantly reduced next-day negative mood. These findings provide support for the reinforcing potential of interventions that increase rewarding social activity in the place of alcohol use.
社交和饮酒行为都有可能改变情绪。然而,如果与不饮酒的社交行为相比,社交饮酒能增强积极情绪、减轻消极情绪,那么通过清醒的社交活动来强化不饮酒的干预措施就会受到影响。我们使用多层次模型分析比较了饮酒日和非饮酒日、与人共度的日子和主要独自度过的日子的每日末情绪。我们评估了饮酒/非饮酒和社交/独处行为之间的相互作用,并评估了社交和饮酒行为对次日情绪的影响是否延伸。参与者为 352 名大学生(女性占 53%;兄弟会/联谊会成员占 55%;平均年龄为 19.7 岁),他们在 1 年内的 4 个 14 天间隔内每天完成 3 次自动电话调查。饮酒和社交与更高的每日末积极情绪和显著更低的每日末消极情绪相关。然而,在交互分析中,没有观察到酒精的积极增强或消极衰减效应。酒精在一天结束时或第二天的情绪改善方面并不优于社交。然而,前一天饮酒显著降低了次日的积极情绪,而社交显著降低了次日的消极情绪。这些发现为增加奖励性社交活动以替代饮酒的干预措施的强化潜力提供了支持。