Does Alcohol Catch the Eye? Investigating Young Adults’ Attention to Alcohol Consumption

Many studies on young adults’ motivations for drinking overlook the symbolic aspects of alcohol use. However, research indicates that young adults’ alcohol consumption is also driven by signaling motivations. Although the interest of a receiver is a necessary prerequisite of a signal, no previous st...

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Main Authors: Eveline Vincke, Patrick Vyncke
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2017-09-01
Series:Evolutionary Psychology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/1474704917730207
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spelling doaj-82f39a994a9343a9a0b4bd0c044705c12020-11-25T03:17:43ZengSAGE PublishingEvolutionary Psychology1474-70492017-09-011510.1177/1474704917730207Does Alcohol Catch the Eye? Investigating Young Adults’ Attention to Alcohol ConsumptionEveline Vincke0Patrick Vyncke1 Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium Ghent University, Ghent, BelgiumMany studies on young adults’ motivations for drinking overlook the symbolic aspects of alcohol use. However, research indicates that young adults’ alcohol consumption is also driven by signaling motivations. Although the interest of a receiver is a necessary prerequisite of a signal, no previous studies have verified whether drinking behavior indeed attracts young adults’ attention. Therefore, we conducted two studies. A two-part eye-tracking study ( N 1 = 135, N 2 = 140) showed that both young men and young women pay special visual attention to male and female drinking behavior. Additionally, a recall experiment ( N = 321) confirmed that observed male and female drinking is better remembered than observed nonsignaling, functional behavior. Moreover, alcoholic beverages also receive special attention, as they were recalled better than other functional products, and also nonalcoholic drinks similar in color and shape. In summary, the experiments clearly showed that male and female drinking behavior can be used as a signal, as both behaviors clearly function as an attention-attracting cue. Additionally, as alcoholic beverages draw more attention than nonalcoholic drinks, this attention is clearly linked to the alcohol element of the drinking behavior.https://doi.org/10.1177/1474704917730207
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eveline Vincke
Patrick Vyncke
spellingShingle Eveline Vincke
Patrick Vyncke
Does Alcohol Catch the Eye? Investigating Young Adults’ Attention to Alcohol Consumption
Evolutionary Psychology
author_facet Eveline Vincke
Patrick Vyncke
author_sort Eveline Vincke
title Does Alcohol Catch the Eye? Investigating Young Adults’ Attention to Alcohol Consumption
title_short Does Alcohol Catch the Eye? Investigating Young Adults’ Attention to Alcohol Consumption
title_full Does Alcohol Catch the Eye? Investigating Young Adults’ Attention to Alcohol Consumption
title_fullStr Does Alcohol Catch the Eye? Investigating Young Adults’ Attention to Alcohol Consumption
title_full_unstemmed Does Alcohol Catch the Eye? Investigating Young Adults’ Attention to Alcohol Consumption
title_sort does alcohol catch the eye? investigating young adults’ attention to alcohol consumption
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Evolutionary Psychology
issn 1474-7049
publishDate 2017-09-01
description Many studies on young adults’ motivations for drinking overlook the symbolic aspects of alcohol use. However, research indicates that young adults’ alcohol consumption is also driven by signaling motivations. Although the interest of a receiver is a necessary prerequisite of a signal, no previous studies have verified whether drinking behavior indeed attracts young adults’ attention. Therefore, we conducted two studies. A two-part eye-tracking study ( N 1 = 135, N 2 = 140) showed that both young men and young women pay special visual attention to male and female drinking behavior. Additionally, a recall experiment ( N = 321) confirmed that observed male and female drinking is better remembered than observed nonsignaling, functional behavior. Moreover, alcoholic beverages also receive special attention, as they were recalled better than other functional products, and also nonalcoholic drinks similar in color and shape. In summary, the experiments clearly showed that male and female drinking behavior can be used as a signal, as both behaviors clearly function as an attention-attracting cue. Additionally, as alcoholic beverages draw more attention than nonalcoholic drinks, this attention is clearly linked to the alcohol element of the drinking behavior.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/1474704917730207
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