Weinstein R M
Int J Addict. 1977 Feb;12(1):121-36. doi: 10.3109/10826087709027213.
Interpersonal expectations for marijuana behavior were investigated by means of open-ended questions. Users and nonusers were asked how the use and nonuse of marijuana affect people's relationships, and their spontaneous replies were assembled into 22 categories. These categories were then cross-tabulated with behavioral, social, experiential, and attitudinal variables. The findings indicated that frequency of marijuana use and favorableness in drug attitude are the key variables that influence the degree to which different categories of interpersonal expectations are mentioned. Current users most often believe that social improvement is a consequence of use but have few specific expectations for nonuse. Former users and nonusers with unfavorable drug attitudes emphasize that social impairment and personal impairment follow from use and mainly expect user rejection for nonuse. Nonusers favorable to marijuana tend to anticipate no change in relationships as a result of use and see social impairment and personal impairment as important outcomes of nonuse. The findings are discussed in terms of interpersonal data from other marijuana studies.
通过开放式问题对大麻行为的人际期望进行了调查。询问使用者和非使用者大麻的使用和不使用如何影响人际关系,并将他们的自发回答归纳为22类。然后将这些类别与行为、社会、体验和态度变量进行交叉制表。研究结果表明,大麻使用频率和对毒品的态度倾向是影响提及不同人际期望类别的程度的关键变量。当前使用者最常认为社会改善是使用的结果,但对不使用几乎没有具体期望。有负面毒品态度的前使用者和非使用者强调使用会导致社会损害和个人损害,并且主要期望因不使用而被使用者排斥。对大麻持好感的非使用者倾向于预期使用不会导致人际关系发生变化,并将社会损害和个人损害视为不使用的重要后果。根据其他大麻研究的人际数据对研究结果进行了讨论。