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The self-schema and addictive behaviors: Studies of alcoholic patients
This study deals with the sociocognitive organization of the self-schema in alcoholic patients. It was aimed at understanding how the self-schema takes shape within the framework of social judgments known to be determinants of personality. Alcoholic subjects were interviewed twice, once during their...
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Published in: | Swiss journal of psychology 2001-06, Vol.60 (2), p.73-81 |
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Main Authors: | , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | This study deals with the sociocognitive organization of the
self-schema in alcoholic patients. It was aimed at understanding how the
self-schema takes shape within the framework of social judgments known
to be determinants of personality. Alcoholic subjects were interviewed twice,
once during their first consultation for treatment and then again four months
later after completion of treatment. Our approach was derived directly from the
methodology used by
Markus
(1977)
and
Clemmey &
Nicassio (1997)
in their studies on the self-schema.
The subjects had to perform three tasks that required manipulating personality
traits with positive and negative connotations (a self-description
task in which decision time was measured, an autobiographical task, and a
recall task). The results of the first interview showed that 1. in their
self-descriptions, alcoholics took more time than control subjects both
to accept positive traits and to reject negative ones; 2. unlike control
subjects, alcoholics considered more negative traits to be
self-descriptive than positive traits, and 3. unlike controls,
alcoholics recalled more negative traits than positive ones. By the second
interview, the results for the alcoholic subjects on the autobiographical and
recall tasks had changed: 1. they now described themselves more positively and
less negatively than on the first meeting; 2. they recalled a marginally
greater number of positive traits and a significantly smaller number of
negative traits, and 3. the differences between the alcoholics and controls
indicated an improvement in the alcoholics' self-perceptions. |
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ISSN: | 1421-0185 1662-0879 |
DOI: | 10.1024//1421-0185.60.2.73 |