Subscribe
The latest psychology and neuroscience discoveries.
My Account
  • Mental Health
  • Social Psychology
  • Cognitive Science
  • Psychopharmacology
  • Neuroscience
  • About
No Result
View All Result
PsyPost
PsyPost
No Result
View All Result
Home Exclusive Mental Health Addiction

Alcohol dampens reactivity to psychological stress, especially for uncertain stressors

by Beth Ellwood
August 24, 2022
in Addiction, Psychopharmacology
(Photo credit: Adobe Stock)

(Photo credit: Adobe Stock)

Share on TwitterShare on Facebook
Stay informed on the latest psychology and neuroscience research—follow PsyPost on LinkedIn for daily updates and insights.

Alcohol can reduce our reactivity to stress, and a new experiment suggests that this effect is stronger for particular types of stressful situations. The findings, published in the journal Clinical Psychological Science, revealed that alcohol more strongly alleviates reactivity when stressors are uncertain — like the stress of receiving an electric shock of unknown intensity.

Previous studies have revealed that consuming alcohol can alleviate the stress response. It has been proposed that this effect encourages people to use alcohol as a stress-coping mechanism, which then reinforces alcohol intake and promotes addiction. It has also been suggested that this stress response dampening is stronger for specific types of stressors. Study author Daniel E. Bradford and his team say that establishing these types of stressors could help inform the prevention and treatment of alcohol use behavior.

“Our laboratory wants to improve mechanistic understanding of the psychological effects of stress and drugs,” explained Bradford, an assistant professor and principal investigator of the Biology and Emotion of Addiction Via Experimental and Reproducible Science (BEAVERS) Lab at Oregon State University.

“The topic of this manuscript interests us because it follows the theory that alcohol may affect responses to some types of stressors more than other types of stressors. More specifically, alcohol may affect responses to stressors that are in some way uncertain more so than stressors that are certain, regardless of how controllable those stressors seem. Because there are different psychological and neurological components to responding to uncertain versus other stressors, this has implications for exactly how alcohol affects stress as well as how the negative effects of alcohol and other drug consumption could be best dealt with.”

Bradford and his colleagues devised a study to test whether the certainty and controllability of a stressor modulates alcohol’s effects on reactivity. A total of 128 college-aged adults participated in the lab experiment. Depending on the condition, the participants were either given alcohol, no alcohol, or a placebo.

They then participated in a paradigm where they received electric shocks during blocks of trials that were either certain (a cue warned participants of the shock intensity) or uncertain (a cue provided a range of possible shock intensities), and either controllable (participants were told they could lower the intensity of the shocks) or uncontrollable (participants were told they could not control the intensity). The subjects self-reported their anxiety levels throughout the task.

Six noise probes were also presented throughout the trial, and the researchers measured participants’ eye-blink startle response. They also used electroencephalogram (EEG) recordings to measure brain responses to the startle probes, also called event-related potentials (ERPs). The researchers specifically focused on the suppression of the P3 ERP response, which served as a measure of emotionally-motivated attention.

The findings revealed that, in all stressor scenarios, alcohol significantly dampened subjective anxiety potentiation, startle potentiation, and probe P3 suppression. But for both anxiety potentiation and startle potentiation, this dampening effect was significantly greater for uncertain versus certain threats. By contrast, alcohol’s dampening effect remained the same for uncontrollable versus controllable stressors.

The findings indicate “that alcohol may not affect responses to all sort of stressors equally, and which types of stress responses alcohol effects may partly determine when alcohol will work best as a stress reliever,” Bradford told PsyPost. “Furthermore, people who use alcohol to deal with uncertain stressors (like being in public with strangers or going on a blind date) may find alcohol particularly reinforcing, and thus harder to abstain from using.”

The researchers note that it will be important for future studies to explore uncertain stressors that more closely resemble stressors in the real world, as opposed to the electric shock stressor. This would increase the generalizability, clinical relevance, and ecological validity of the findings.

“There are always major caveats in research,” Bradford said. “Some to note about this research is that it is based on translational experimental models which help us to understand things like neural mechanisms but this experimental situation may not generalize that well to everyday situations outside of the laboratory. For example, the stressors used in this laboratory story were threat of mild electric shock like is used in rodent research.”

“We still need to see how well these effects generalize to other types of stressors that may be more present in day-to-day life. Furthermore, while stressor uncertainty may be a potentially important aspect of the stressors when to comes to drug use, it is almost certainly not the only one. We still need to rule out other aspects of stressors like how long they last.”

“I will note that the data processing and analysis parameters of this study were preregistered, which can help you trust the statistical results,” Bradford added. “Preregistration helps guard against any unintentional (or intentional) messing around with the processing and analysis to try and get an outcome that the researchers want. You can learn more about this by reading about the Replication Crisis, the Open Science Movement or the Reproducibility Revolution.”

The study, “Alcohol’s Effects During Uncertain and Uncontrollable Stressors in the Laboratory”, was authored by Daniel E. Bradford, Jack M. Shireman, Sarah J. Sant’Ana, Gaylen E. Fronk, Susan E. Schneck, and John J. Curtin.

TweetSendScanShareSendPin5ShareShareShareShareShare

RELATED

Common antidepressant may increase pain sensitivity later in life if taken during adolescence
Depression

Common antidepressant may increase pain sensitivity later in life if taken during adolescence

May 11, 2025

A new animal study shows that adolescent use of fluoxetine, a commonly prescribed antidepressant, may have long-lasting effects on how the brain processes pain. Female mice exposed to the drug displayed increased sensitivity to heat stimuli as adults.

Read moreDetails
Psilocybin use has surged in the United States since 2019
Psilocybin

Psilocybin use has surged in the United States since 2019

May 10, 2025

Psilocybin use has surged across the U.S. in recent years, with the biggest increases seen among adults with depression, anxiety, and chronic pain.

Read moreDetails
Microdoses of LSD enhance neural complexity, study finds
Depression

Little-known psychedelic drug shows promise in treating low motivation in depression

May 9, 2025

Researchers investigating the psychedelic drug DOPR discovered that very low doses can enhance motivation in low-performing mice—without triggering behaviors linked to hallucinations. The findings point to the therapeutic potential of psychedelics at doses too low to alter perception.

Read moreDetails
Researchers uncover causal evidence that cannabis legalization reduces problematic consumption
Cannabis

Researchers uncover causal evidence that cannabis legalization reduces problematic consumption

May 8, 2025

Researchers in Switzerland have completed the first randomized trial comparing legal and illegal cannabis use. The study suggests that public health-oriented cannabis access may help reduce misuse, particularly among people with more complex patterns of drug use.

Read moreDetails
A dose of psilocybin stirred the brain of a barely conscious woman
Neuroimaging

A dose of psilocybin stirred the brain of a barely conscious woman

May 7, 2025

In a groundbreaking case report, scientists administered psilocybin to a woman in a minimally conscious state and observed increased brain complexity and new spontaneous behavior—offering a glimpse into how psychedelics might influence consciousness in severe brain injury patients.

Read moreDetails
Genetic risk for alcoholism linked to brain immune cell response, study finds
Addiction

Genetic risk for alcoholism linked to brain immune cell response, study finds

May 7, 2025

New research shows that microglia—the brain’s immune cells—respond more strongly to alcohol in people with a high genetic risk for alcohol use disorder. The findings offer insight into how inherited factors can shape brain responses to alcohol exposure.

Read moreDetails
Around 27% of individuals with ADHD develop cannabis use disorder at some point in their lives, study finds
Cannabis

Daily use of cannabis is strongly associated with chronic inflammation, study finds

May 6, 2025

A new study suggests daily cannabis use may be linked to chronic inflammation. Researchers found that young adults who used cannabis frequently had higher levels of suPAR, an inflammatory marker, while occasional users did not.

Read moreDetails
CBD amplifies THC’s impact instead of mitigating it, new cannabis research reveals
Addiction

N-acetylcysteine does not appear to be effective for cannabis use disorder

May 4, 2025

In a study of young people with cannabis use disorder, N-acetylcysteine failed to outperform a placebo in reducing cannabis use, suggesting that the supplement may not be effective unless combined with more intensive behavioral interventions like contingency management.

Read moreDetails

SUBSCRIBE

Go Ad-Free! Click here to subscribe to PsyPost and support independent science journalism!

STAY CONNECTED

LATEST

Brain rhythms tied to social anxiety may explain why mistakes linger in memory

Common antidepressant may increase pain sensitivity later in life if taken during adolescence

Maternal warmth in childhood predicts key personality traits years later

Psilocybin use has surged in the United States since 2019

Knowledge isn’t enough: What really predicts condom use in teens

Schizophrenia may accelerate brain ageing, new study finds

New study uncovers an intriguing liver–brain connection

Parental warmth—not poverty or danger—predicts positive world beliefs in adulthood

         
       
  • Contact us
  • Privacy policy
  • Terms and Conditions
[Do not sell my information]

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

Subscribe
  • My Account
  • Cognitive Science Research
  • Mental Health Research
  • Social Psychology Research
  • Drug Research
  • Relationship Research
  • About PsyPost
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy