Veterans Affairs Connecticut Healthcare System/Yale University School of Medicine, West Haven, Connecticut.
Department of Psychological Science, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Arkansas.
J Stud Alcohol Drugs. 2023 Mar;84(2):245-256. doi: 10.15288/jsad.22-00079. Epub 2022 Sep 12.
A growing body of research implicates Fear of Missing Out (FoMO) as a risk factor for collegiate alcohol use. However, little research has explored the causal mechanisms of this association, which may depend on examining FoMO at both trait and state levels. We therefore examined how predispositions toward experiencing FoMO (i.e., trait-FoMO) interacted with state-level cues indicating that one was "missing out" (i.e., state-FoMO) and cues indicating the presence or absence of alcohol.
College students ( = 544) participating in an online experiment completed a measure of trait-FoMO and were then randomly assigned to one of four guided-imagery script conditions (FoMO/Alcohol cue, FoMO/No Alcohol cue, No FoMO/Alcohol cue, No FoMO/No Alcohol cue). Participants then completed measures of alcohol craving and drinking likelihood for the given scenario.
Two hierarchical regressions (one per dependent variable) revealed significant two-way interactions. Greater trait-FoMO demonstrated the strongest, positive associations with alcohol craving following scenarios with FoMO cues present. Reported drinking likelihood was strongest when state-level cues for FoMO and alcohol were both present, moderate when either cue was independently present, and lowest when both cues were absent.
FoMO's impact on alcohol craving and drinking likelihood varied across trait/state levels. Although trait-FoMO was associated with alcohol craving, state-level cues indicating "missing out" affected both alcohol-related variables and interacted with alcohol cues in imagery scenarios to predict drinking likelihood. Although additional research is needed, targeting psychological variables related to meaningful social connection may reduce collegiate alcohol use with respect to FoMO.
越来越多的研究表明,错失恐惧(Fear of Missing Out,FoMO)是大学生饮酒的一个风险因素。然而,很少有研究探讨这种关联的因果机制,这可能取决于同时检查特质水平和状态水平的 FoMO。因此,我们研究了体验 FoMO 的倾向(即特质 FoMO)如何与表明一个人“错失”的状态水平线索(即状态 FoMO)以及表明是否存在酒精的线索相互作用。
参与在线实验的大学生(n=544)完成了一项特质 FoMO 测量,然后被随机分配到四种引导想象脚本条件之一(FoMO/酒精线索、FoMO/无酒精线索、无 FoMO/酒精线索、无 FoMO/无酒精线索)。然后,参与者完成了给定情景下的酒精渴望和饮酒可能性的测量。
两个因变量的两个层次回归(每个因变量一个)显示出显著的双向交互作用。在存在 FoMO 线索的情景下,更大的特质 FoMO 与酒精渴望呈最强的正相关。当 FoMO 和酒精的状态水平线索都存在时,报告的饮酒可能性最强,当只有一个线索存在时中等,当两个线索都不存在时最低。
FoMO 对酒精渴望和饮酒可能性的影响因特质/状态水平而异。尽管特质 FoMO 与酒精渴望相关,但表明“错失”的状态水平线索会影响与酒精相关的两个变量,并与想象情景中的酒精线索相互作用,从而预测饮酒可能性。虽然还需要更多的研究,但针对与有意义的社会联系相关的心理变量可能会减少大学生对 FoMO 的饮酒行为。