Caudill B D, Lipscomb T R
J Appl Behav Anal. 1980 Summer;13(2):355-65. doi: 10.1901/jaba.1980.13-355.
Two experiments were designed to examine modeling influences on alcoholics' alcohol consumption. Three male alcoholics were paired with confederates, posing as alcoholics. In Experiment 1, alcoholic-confederate pairs participated in a 1-hour taste-rating task, which involved rating different wines on a list of adjectives. Experiment 2 consisted of 1-hour ad lib access to wine in a naturalistic bar setting. In both experiments, confederates alternated 15-minute periods of heavy and light consumption, drinking fluids resembling wine. The amount of wine consumed by alcoholics in each period was secretly recorded and the data examined on a single subject basis. In Experiment 1, two subjects increased and decreased consumption along with their confederate. The third subject followed the confederate's pattern only after the confederate demonstrated heavy consumption. All three subjects varied consumption with the confederate during Experiment 2, performed later on the same day. These results suggest that alcoholics' alcohol consumption can be modified by the social influences of modeling. The implications of this finding for the loss of control hypothesis and alcoholism treatment maintenance were discussed.
设计了两项实验来检验模仿对酗酒者酒精摄入量的影响。三名男性酗酒者与假扮成酗酒者的同谋配对。在实验1中,酗酒者与同谋配对参与一项1小时的口味评级任务,该任务包括根据一系列形容词对不同的葡萄酒进行评级。实验2包括在自然主义的酒吧环境中自由饮用葡萄酒1小时。在两项实验中,同谋交替进行15分钟的大量饮酒和少量饮酒时段,饮用类似葡萄酒的液体。每个时段酗酒者饮用的葡萄酒量被秘密记录下来,并在单个受试者的基础上对数据进行检查。在实验1中,两名受试者的饮酒量随着同谋的饮酒量增加和减少。第三名受试者仅在同谋展示大量饮酒后才遵循同谋的模式。在同一天晚些时候进行的实验2中,所有三名受试者的饮酒量都随着同谋而变化。这些结果表明,酗酒者的酒精摄入量可以通过模仿的社会影响而改变。讨论了这一发现对失控假说和酗酒治疗维持的影响。