Fairbairn Catharine E, Velia Brynne A, Creswell Kasey G, Sayette Michael A
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Carnegie Mellon University.
J Exp Soc Psychol. 2020 Jan;86. doi: 10.1016/j.jesp.2019.103903. Epub 2019 Oct 27.
Many social interactions involve alcohol consumption, and drinking alcohol can lead to powerful increases in enjoyment in these social contexts. Yet we know almost nothing of the means by which alcohol enhances social experience. Importantly, since individuals in social contexts not only respond to environmental conditions, but can also actively generate these conditions, understanding alcohol's social enhancement within wholly unstructured social interaction presents challenges. To address this issue, the current study examines responses of individuals participating in a structured pleasurable experience in social context (humor presentation)-a drinking context with ecological-validity that permits us to test theories of alcohol-related social-enhancement through isolating responses to the controlled presentation of pleasurable stimuli (i.e., comedy punchlines). Participants ( = 513) were randomly-assigned to consume an alcoholic, placebo, or control beverage in the laboratory. Participants were video-recorded during presentation of a comedy routine in 3-person groups, and participants' Duchenne smiles were recorded on a frame-by-frame basis using the Facial Action Coding System. Comedy punchlines were coded by five raters and validated via an independently collected sample of participants ( = 30). Results of nested frailty survival models, controlling for the smiles of other group members, indicated a significant interaction between punchlines and alcohol in predicting smiles. Specifically, alcohol selectively increased smiling during times when no humorous stimuli were being presented, whereas there was no significant effect of alcohol on smiling in response to the humorous stimuli themselves. Findings highlight the importance of less intrinsically entertaining social moments for understanding alcohol-related social enhancement.
许多社交互动都涉及饮酒,并且在这些社交情境中饮酒会极大地提升愉悦感。然而,我们对酒精增强社交体验的方式却几乎一无所知。重要的是,由于处于社交情境中的个体不仅会对环境条件做出反应,还能积极创造这些条件,因此在完全无组织的社交互动中理解酒精对社交的增强作用面临挑战。为了解决这个问题,当前的研究考察了参与社交情境中结构化愉悦体验(幽默表演)的个体的反应——这是一个具有生态效度的饮酒情境,使我们能够通过分离对愉悦刺激(即喜剧笑点)的受控呈现的反应来测试与酒精相关的社交增强理论。参与者((n = 513))被随机分配在实验室中饮用含酒精饮料、安慰剂或对照饮料。在三人小组进行喜剧表演期间对参与者进行录像,并使用面部动作编码系统逐帧记录参与者的杜兴氏微笑。喜剧笑点由五名评分者进行编码,并通过独立收集的一组参与者((n = 30))进行验证。在控制了其他小组成员微笑的情况下,嵌套脆弱生存模型的结果表明,在预测微笑方面,笑点和酒精之间存在显著的交互作用。具体而言,在没有呈现幽默刺激的时候,酒精选择性地增加了微笑,而酒精对因幽默刺激本身而产生的微笑没有显著影响。研究结果凸显了在理解与酒精相关的社交增强方面,那些本身趣味性较低的社交时刻的重要性。