提示引起的饮酒冲动和酗酒者的唾液分泌:与个体差异的关系

Damaris J Rohsenow , Peter M Monti , David B Abrams , Anthony V Rubonis , Raymond S Niaura , Alan D Sirota , Suzanne M Colby
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引用次数: 97

摘要

复吸的社会学习模型包括关注药物滥用者对药物使用线索的习得反应,但线索引发的心理生理反应和使用冲动所起的相对作用尚不清楚。这些类型的线索引发的反应之间的关系,对个体差异的测量,对注意力过程的关系,以及对复发的关系,在最近的三项研究中进行了回顾(已发表或将在其他地方发表)。研究人员对参与三项研究之一的酗酒男性进行了线索反应性评估(在闻酒精饮料和水时的唾液分泌和饮酒冲动),以及个体差异测量。流涎和喝水的冲动之间的关系很弱或不显著。提示引起的饮酒冲动通常与负面情绪、对身体反应的意识、对酒精的关注以及对酒精的视觉和嗅觉的享受有关。流涎往往与这些有意识的过程无关,尽管在那些期望酒精产生更多积极影响的人和那些更依赖酒精的人中,流涎更明显。在解毒后的前三个月,唾液分泌但不急于饮酒可预测饮酒的数量和频率。结果与酒精使用的食欲-动机模型以及Tiffany(1990)的假设一致,即在药物使用行为中,自动过程比有意识过程更重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Cue elicited urge to drink and salivation in alcoholics: Relationship to individual differences

Social learning models of relapse have included a focus on the learned reactions of substance abusers to the presence of substance use cues, but the relative roles played by cue-elicited psychophysiological reactions and urges to use have been unclear. The relationships of these kinds of cue-elicited reactions to each other, to measures of individual differences, to attentional processes, and to relapse are reviewed across three recent studies (published or to be published elsewhere). Alcoholic males who participated in one of three studies were assessed for cue reactivity (salivation and urge to drink while sniffing an alcoholic beverage versus water) as well as individual difference measures. Salivation and urge to drink have a weak or nonsignificant relationship to each other. Cue-elicited urge to drink generally correlates with negative mood, awareness of somatic reactions, attention to alcohol, and enjoyment of the sight and smell of alcohol. Salivation tends not to be related to these conscious processes although it is greater among those who expect more positive effects from alcohol, and among those with more alcohol dependence. Salivation but not urge to drink was predictive of quantity and frequency of drinking during the first three months post-detoxification. Results are generally consistent with appetitive-motivation models of alcohol use and with Tiffany's (1990) hypothesis that automatic processes are more important than conscious processes in drug-use behavior.

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