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The sequential daily process through which alcohol expectancies predict acute drinking behavior.

Jack T Waddell1, Scott E King2, William R Corbin2

  • 1Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Diego.

Psychology of Addictive Behaviors : Journal of the Society of Psychologists in Addictive Behaviors
|May 5, 2025
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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Daily alcohol expectancies influence drinking behavior through social context, subjective effects, and craving. Positive expectancies can increase drinking, while relaxation expectancies may decrease it, highlighting self-fulfilling prophecies.

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Area of Science:

  • Psychology
  • Addiction Research
  • Behavioral Science

Background:

  • Alcohol expectancies are established risk factors for problem drinking.
  • Mechanisms linking daily expectancy fluctuations to acute drinking behavior remain understudied.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the sequential mediation of social context, subjective responses, and craving in the relationship between daily expectancy deviations and drinking behavior.
  • To examine how different types of alcohol expectancies (rewarding, relaxation, aggression) influence drinking patterns.

Main Methods:

  • A 21-day ecological momentary assessment study with 131 participants reporting binge, social, and solitary drinking.
  • Multilevel models analyzed the predictive relationships between daytime expectancies, social context, subjective responses (valence/arousal), craving, and within-session drinking.

Main Results:

  • Increased daytime expectancies predicted experiencing expected effects during drinking.
  • Rewarding expectancies predicted social drinking and heavier consumption via enhanced rewarding effects and craving.
  • Relaxation expectancies were associated with reduced drinking, while aggression expectancies predicted increased drinking via aggressive effects and craving.

Conclusions:

  • Daily alcohol expectancies act as self-fulfilling prophecies, predicting context-specific drinking and subjective experiences.
  • Interventions targeting daytime expectancy fluctuations and promoting protective strategies may be beneficial for managing alcohol consumption.