社会影响与饮酒问题:来自COVID-19大流行的见解。

IF 4.1 2区 医学 Q1 PSYCHIATRY
Jiaxu Han, Catharine E Fairbairn, Kasey G Creswell, Walter James Venerable
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在社交网络中,酒精消费模式可以从一个人传播到另一个人。然而,这种社会影响发生所需的必要条件尚未明确界定。在这里,我们利用了2019冠状病毒病后社会生活的突然和巨大变化,这是一种自然现象,使社会关系脱离了这些关系通常所处的环境。使用基于社交网络的聚类纵向设计,我们检查了重度饮酒的友谊二人组和三合组(N=314)在大流行前后的纵向追踪中的酒精使用模式。与假设一致,结果表明COVID-19时代对社会影响效应产生了破坏性影响——虽然友谊持续存在,但朋友和参与者饮酒问题之间的纵向联系在COVID-19中显着减少。与这些个体间的影响相反,参与者过去和现在饮酒之间的个体内部(即自回归)联系保持完整。结果为理解社会影响效应的机制提供了信息,指出了环境的潜在作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Social Influence and Problematic Drinking: Insights from the COVID-19 Pandemic.

Patterns of alcohol consumption can spread from one person to the next in social networks. Yet the necessary conditions required for this social influence to occur are not clearly defined. Here we leverage the sudden and seismic shift in social life following COVID-19, a natural phenomenon that divorced social relationships from the contexts those relationships typically inhabit. Using a social network-based clustered longitudinal design, we examined alcohol use patterns among cohorts of heavy drinking friendship dyads and triads (N=314) traced longitudinally pre- and post-pandemic. In line with hypotheses, results indicated a disruptive effect of COVID-era on social influence effects-while friendships endured, longitudinal links between friends' and participants' problem drinking diminished significantly with COVID-19. In contrast to these inter-individual effects, intra-individual (i.e., autoregressive) links between participants' past and present drinking remained intact. Results inform the understanding of mechanisms undergirding social influence effects, pointing to a potential role for context.

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来源期刊
Clinical Psychological Science
Clinical Psychological Science Psychology-Clinical Psychology
CiteScore
9.70
自引率
2.10%
发文量
35
期刊介绍: The Association for Psychological Science’s journal, Clinical Psychological Science, emerges from this confluence to provide readers with the best, most innovative research in clinical psychological science, giving researchers of all stripes a home for their work and a place in which to communicate with a broad audience of both clinical and other scientists.
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