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Alcohol-induced stimulation and sedation: relation to physical aggression.

Author
Abstract
:

The relation between the stimulating and the sedating effects of acute alcohol consumption on human physical aggression was examined. Sixty male social drinkers were assigned to either an alcohol or a sober group. Aggression was measured using a modified version of S. Taylor's (1967) aggression paradigm, in which electric shocks are received from and administered to a fictitious opponent during a competitive task. Aggression was operationalized as the intensity and the duration of the shocks selected. Stimulation and sedation were measured using a self-report inventory. Results demonstrated that stimulation was positively related to aggression, but only in the intoxicated state. Sedation was not related to aggression in either the intoxicated or the sober state.

Year of Publication
:
1998
Journal
:
The Journal of general psychology
Volume
:
125
Issue
:
4
Number of Pages
:
297-304
ISSN Number
:
0022-1309
DOI
:
10.1080/00221309809595339
Short Title
:
J Gen Psychol
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