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Research Article
Alcohol and Aggression: A Test of the Attention-Allocation Model
Peter R. Giancola 1 and Michelle D. Corman 1
  1 University of Kentucky
 Address correspondence to Peter R. Giancola, Department of Psychology, University of Kentucky, 115 Kastle Hall, Lexington, KY 40506-0044, e-mail: peter@email.uky.edu.
Copyright Copyright © 2007 Association for Psychological Science

ABSTRACT

ABSTRACT—This article presents the first systematic test of the attention-allocation model for alcohol-related aggression. According to this model, alcohol has a "myopic" effect on attentional capacity that presumably facilitates aggression by focusing attention on more salient provocative, rather than less salient inhibitory, cues in hostile situations. Aggression was assessed using a laboratory task in which mild electric shocks were received from, and administered to, a fictitious opponent. Study 1 demonstrated that a moderate-load cognitive distractor suppressed aggression in intoxicated subjects (to levels even lower than those exhibited by a placebo control group). Study 2 assessed how varying the magnitude of a distracting cognitive load affected aggression in the alcohol and placebo conditions. Results indicated that the moderate-load distraction used in Study 1 (i.e., holding four elements in sequential order in working memory) suppressed aggression best. Cognitive loads of larger and smaller magnitudes were not successful in attenuating aggression.


(Received 4/24/06; Revision accepted 11/22/06; Final materials received 1/4/07)

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1467-9280.2007.01953.x About DOI

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