Literature DB >> 30079876

Increasing Chance-Based Uncertainty Reduces Heavy Drinkers' Cognitive Reactance to Web-Based Personalized Normative Feedback.

Sarah C Boyle1, Andrew M Earle1, Nate McCabe1, Joseph W LaBrie1.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Despite its prominence in the health communication literature, psychological reactance has rarely been considered as a factor that may undermine web-based Personalized Normative Feedback (PNF) alcohol interventions for college students. This study built on recent gamification work to examine how chance-based uncertainty, a popular game mechanic associated with motivation and attention in digital games for learning, might be leveraged to reduce the psychological reactance experienced by heavy drinking students receiving alcohol PNF, thereby leading to larger reductions in their alcohol consumption.
METHOD: Psychological reactance, perceptions of norms, and drinking behaviors were assessed during a 3-week period following random assignment of binge drinking students (N = 141, 51% female) into one of four web-based PNF conditions. These conditions asked the same questions about drinking and delivered identical PNF on alcohol use but differed in whether animated slot-machine spinners appeared to select participants' question and feedback topics as well as the number of additional topics (beyond alcohol) on which questions were asked and PNF was delivered.
RESULTS: All conditions similarly reduced drinking norms but differed in the degree to which they aroused cognitive reactance and reduced drinking. Relative to a no-spinner alcohol-only condition, increasing chance-based uncertainty by giving question and feedback topics the appearance of being selected by gamelike spinners substantially reduced cognitive reactance, which, in turn, reduced drinking 20 days later. Overall, participants experienced the least cognitive reactance when spinners first selected three question topics and later selected two of these topics to deliver feedback on.
CONCLUSIONS: Findings suggest that introducing chance-based uncertainty through gamelike spinners, asking questions about multiple topics, and delivering feedback on additional topics unrelated to alcohol together work to reduce the degree to which the task feels like an alcohol intervention overtly aimed at reducing consumption, thereby making the alcohol PNF more effective among heavy drinking students.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30079876      PMCID: PMC6090103     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Stud Alcohol Drugs        ISSN: 1937-1888            Impact factor:   2.582


  23 in total

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3.  Differential effects of exposure to social norms campaigns: a cause for concern.

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Journal:  Health Commun       Date:  2006

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5.  Social comparison as a moderator of the association between perceived norms and alcohol use and negative consequences among college students.

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6.  Digital Media Use and Social Engagement: How Social Media and Smartphone Use Influence Social Activities of College Students.

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7.  Perceiving the community norms of alcohol use among students: some research implications for campus alcohol education programming.

Authors:  H W Perkins; A D Berkowitz
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8.  Identifying principal risk factors for the initiation of adolescent smoking behaviors: the significance of psychological reactance.

Authors:  Claude H Miller; Michael Burgoon; Joseph R Grandpre; Eusebio M Alvaro
Journal:  Health Commun       Date:  2006

9.  Social comparisons on social media: the impact of Facebook on young women's body image concerns and mood.

Authors:  Jasmine Fardouly; Phillippa C Diedrichs; Lenny R Vartanian; Emma Halliwell
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10.  The efficacy of single-component brief motivational interventions among at-risk college drinkers.

Authors:  Matthew P Martens; Ashley E Smith; James G Murphy
Journal:  J Consult Clin Psychol       Date:  2013-03-18
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4.  An examination of the prospective associations between objectively assessed exposure to alcohol-related Instagram content, alcohol-specific cognitions, and first-year college drinking.

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