Department of Psychology.
Exp Clin Psychopharmacol. 2022 Jun;30(3):313-325. doi: 10.1037/pha0000451. Epub 2021 Feb 25.
Episodic future thinking (EFT), an exercise that involves cognitive simulation of future events, has demonstrated proximal effects on alcohol demand and delayed reward discounting (DRD). However, few studies have investigated EFT's potential to reduce alcohol use and increase positive behaviors outside of the laboratory. This study is the first to pilot an academic goal-relevant EFT (A-EFT) intervention for heavy drinking college students. The primary goals were to evaluate the feasibility and acceptability of A-EFT in this population. A secondary goal was to evaluate between- and within-condition changes from baseline to post-intervention and 1-month assessments. Participants were 45 undergraduates (73% women, 53% White, 27% Black) who reported at least two past-month heavy drinking episodes (4/5 drinks for women/men). Participants were randomized to a brief in-person A-EFT intervention or to a vivid memory task (VMT) control. In support of feasibility and acceptability, recruitment and retention rates were over 80% and participants rated the A-EFT intervention as enjoyable, personally relevant, and interesting. In support of initial efficacy, participants assigned to A-EFT increased the amount of time spent studying compared to controls ( = 1.16) at 1-month assessment. Participants in the A-EFT group reported moderate effect size reductions in alcohol consumption, and a similar size increase in protective drinking strategies. Demand intensity decreased moderately at post-intervention for participants in the A-EFT condition but there was little change in DRD. The current study provides support for the feasibility and acceptability of an academic goal-relevant EFT intervention and for further research to establish treatment efficacy. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
片段式未来思考(EFT),一种涉及对未来事件进行认知模拟的练习,已显示出对酒精需求和延迟奖励折扣(DRD)的近期影响。然而,很少有研究调查 EFT 减少实验室外饮酒和增加积极行为的潜力。这项研究首次为重度饮酒的大学生试点了一项与学术目标相关的 EFT(A-EFT)干预。主要目标是评估这种人群中 A-EFT 的可行性和可接受性。次要目标是评估从基线到干预后和 1 个月评估的组间和组内变化。参与者为 45 名本科生(73%为女性,53%为白人,27%为黑人),他们报告至少有两个过去一个月的重度饮酒事件(女性/男性 4/5 杯)。参与者被随机分配到简短的面对面 A-EFT 干预或生动记忆任务(VMT)对照。为了支持可行性和可接受性,招募和保留率超过 80%,参与者认为 A-EFT 干预令人愉快、个人相关且有趣。为了支持初步疗效,与对照组相比,被分配到 A-EFT 的参与者在 1 个月评估时增加了学习时间( = 1.16)。A-EFT 组的参与者报告说,酒精摄入量的减少幅度适中,而保护饮酒策略的增加幅度相似。在 A-EFT 条件下,参与者的需求强度在干预后适度下降,但 DRD 几乎没有变化。目前的研究为与学术目标相关的 EFT 干预的可行性和可接受性提供了支持,并为进一步研究建立治疗效果提供了支持。(PsycInfo 数据库记录(c)2022 APA,保留所有权利)。