Alcohol myopia and goal commitment

According to alcohol-myopia theory, acute alcohol consumption leads people to disproportionally focus on the salient rather than the peripheral aspects of a situation. We summarize various studies exploring how myopic processes resulting from acute alcohol intake affect goal commitment. After consum...

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Main Authors: A. Timur Sevincer, Gabriele eOettingen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-03-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00169/full
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spelling doaj-3935b427a31e4013b7b18d95861edc862020-11-25T01:01:49ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782014-03-01510.3389/fpsyg.2014.0016978924Alcohol myopia and goal commitmentA. Timur Sevincer0Gabriele eOettingen1Gabriele eOettingen2University of HamburgUniversity of HamburgNew York UniversityAccording to alcohol-myopia theory, acute alcohol consumption leads people to disproportionally focus on the salient rather than the peripheral aspects of a situation. We summarize various studies exploring how myopic processes resulting from acute alcohol intake affect goal commitment. After consuming alcohol student participants felt strongly committed to an important personal goal even though they had low expectations of successfully attaining the goal. However, once intoxicated participants were sober again (i.e., not myopic anymore) they failed to act on their goal commitment. In line with alcohol-myopia theory, strong goal commitment as a result of alcohol intake was mediated by intoxicated (vs. sober) participants disproportionally focusing on the desirability rather than the feasibility of their goal. Further supporting alcohol-myopia theory, when the low feasibility of attaining a particular goal was experimentally made salient (either explicitly or implicitly by subliminal priming), intoxicated participants felt less committed than those who consumed a placebo. We discuss these effects of acute alcohol intake in the context of research on the effects of chronic alcohol consumption on goal commitment.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00169/fullMotivationalcoholSelf-regulationexpectationsincentivegoal commitment
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author A. Timur Sevincer
Gabriele eOettingen
Gabriele eOettingen
spellingShingle A. Timur Sevincer
Gabriele eOettingen
Gabriele eOettingen
Alcohol myopia and goal commitment
Frontiers in Psychology
Motivation
alcohol
Self-regulation
expectations
incentive
goal commitment
author_facet A. Timur Sevincer
Gabriele eOettingen
Gabriele eOettingen
author_sort A. Timur Sevincer
title Alcohol myopia and goal commitment
title_short Alcohol myopia and goal commitment
title_full Alcohol myopia and goal commitment
title_fullStr Alcohol myopia and goal commitment
title_full_unstemmed Alcohol myopia and goal commitment
title_sort alcohol myopia and goal commitment
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2014-03-01
description According to alcohol-myopia theory, acute alcohol consumption leads people to disproportionally focus on the salient rather than the peripheral aspects of a situation. We summarize various studies exploring how myopic processes resulting from acute alcohol intake affect goal commitment. After consuming alcohol student participants felt strongly committed to an important personal goal even though they had low expectations of successfully attaining the goal. However, once intoxicated participants were sober again (i.e., not myopic anymore) they failed to act on their goal commitment. In line with alcohol-myopia theory, strong goal commitment as a result of alcohol intake was mediated by intoxicated (vs. sober) participants disproportionally focusing on the desirability rather than the feasibility of their goal. Further supporting alcohol-myopia theory, when the low feasibility of attaining a particular goal was experimentally made salient (either explicitly or implicitly by subliminal priming), intoxicated participants felt less committed than those who consumed a placebo. We discuss these effects of acute alcohol intake in the context of research on the effects of chronic alcohol consumption on goal commitment.
topic Motivation
alcohol
Self-regulation
expectations
incentive
goal commitment
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00169/full
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