Sobell L C, Sobell M B, Riley D M, Klajner F, Leo G I, Pavan D, Cancilla A
J Stud Alcohol. 1986 Jul;47(4):333-40. doi: 10.15288/jsa.1986.47.333.
The drinking behavior of 96 male normal drinking college students was assessed after they viewed a videotape of a popular prime-time television program complete with advertisements. Different versions of the videotape were used to evaluate the effects of a television program with and without alcohol scenes as crossed with the effects of three different types of advertisements (i.e., beer, nonalcoholic beverages and food). After viewing the videotape, the subjects, who were led to believe that they were participating in two separate and unrelated sets of experimental procedures, were asked to perform a taste rating of light beers, which actually provided an unobtrusive measure of their alcohol consumption. The results provided no support for the widely held assumption that drinking scenes in television programs or televised advertisements for alcoholic beverages precipitate increased drinking by viewers. This finding, however, must be considered in the context of the laboratory setting of the study, and thus may not generalize to real-life television viewing. Further research in this area is clearly needed, including an evaluation of the effects of television program content and advertisements on other populations (e.g., alcohol abusers).
96名正常饮酒的男大学生在观看了一段配有广告的热门黄金时段电视节目的录像带后,其饮酒行为得到了评估。使用不同版本的录像带,以评估有酒精场景和无酒精场景的电视节目与三种不同类型广告(即啤酒、非酒精饮料和食品)的交叉影响。观看录像带后,受试者被引导相信他们正在参与两个独立且不相关的实验程序,随后要求他们对淡啤酒进行口味评分,这实际上是对他们酒精摄入量的一种隐性测量。结果并不支持电视节目中的饮酒场景或酒精饮料电视广告会促使观众饮酒量增加这一广泛持有的假设。然而,这一发现必须在该研究的实验室环境背景下加以考虑,因此可能无法推广到现实生活中的电视观看情况。显然需要在这一领域进行进一步研究,包括评估电视节目内容和广告对其他人群(如酗酒者)的影响。