共 4 条
Not by associations alone: The role of contextual factors, individual differences, and propositional learning in the malleability of implicit alcohol attitudes
被引:1
|作者:
Noel, Jeffrey G.
[1
,3
]
Petzel, Zachary W.
[2
,4
]
机构:
[1] Univ Missouri St Louis, St Louis, MO 63134 USA
[2] Queens Univ Belfast, Belfast, Antrim, North Ireland
[3] Univ Missouri, Missouri Inst Mental Hlth, 4633 World Pkwy Circle, St Louis, MO 63134 USA
[4] Queens Univ Belfast, Sch Psychol, Belfast, Antrim, North Ireland
关键词:
Evaluative conditioning;
Individual differences;
Contextual factors;
Drinking behavior;
Alcohol;
COLLEGE-STUDENT DRINKING;
PREDICT DRINKING;
INTERVENTIONS;
HABITS;
D O I:
10.1016/j.addbeh.2020.106460
中图分类号:
B849 [应用心理学];
学科分类号:
040203 ;
摘要:
Alcohol attitudes predict unique variance in drinking behavior and have been the target of manipulations and interventions to reduce high-risk alcohol use among youth and adults. However, whether these manipulations create long-lasting changes in alcohol-related attitudes and drinking behavior is unclear. The current mini-review focuses on evaluative conditioning (EC), a manipulation which pairs alcohol-related stimuli repeatedly with affectively valanced stimuli to create new semantic associations in memory; such associations underlie reflexive or impulsive behaviors like high-risk alcohol use. Across experimental studies, EC has been shown to promote negative alcohol attitudes and reduce alcohol consumption. However, recent evidence suggests the effectiveness of EC may depend on the depth of learning facilitated during the task, which may strengthen the semantic associations through propositional learning. While researchers have experimentally promoted greater depth of learning through the manipulation of contextual factors, we review evidence that alcohol-related individual differences also impact the effectiveness of alcohol EC, particularly when these factors are explicitly linked to the stimuli used during the manipulation. This review provides future directions for researchers and practitioners aiming to shape alcohol-related attitudes and behaviors. Specifically, the malleability of alcohol-related attitudes may depend on propositional learning facilitated by contextual and individual factors. Researchers and practitioners should incorporate these factors into interventions like EC aiming to reduce high-risk alcohol consumption.
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