Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
Health

Turns Out, 'Drunk You' Not That Different From 'Sober You'

Darpan News Desk IANS, 16 Jun, 2017 11:24 PM
  • Turns Out, 'Drunk You' Not That Different From 'Sober You'
Your personality may change when you drink, but less than you think, according to a recent study.
 
People typically report substantive changes to their personality when they become intoxicated, but observations from outsiders suggest less drastic differences between "sober" and "drunk" personalities, according to the University of Missouri research.
 
"We were surprised to find such a discrepancy between drinkers' perceptions of their own alcohol-induced personalities and how observers perceived them," said psychological scientist Rachel Winograd. "Participants reported experiencing differences in all factors of the Five Factor Model of personality, but extraversion was the only factor robustly perceived to be different across participants in alcohol and sober conditions."
 
Winograd and colleagues speculate that this discrepancy may come down to inherent differences in point of view: "We believe both the participants and raters were both accurate and inaccurate - the raters reliably reported what was visible to them and the participants experienced internal changes that were real to them but imperceptible to observers," she explained.
 
The idea that we transform into different people when we're under the influence is a popular one. And systematic differences in an individual's sober behaviour and their drunken behaviours can even inform clinical determinations about whether someone has a drinking problem.
 
But the science on "drunk personality" as a concept is less clear. In Winograd's previous studies, participants reliably reported that their personality changes when they imbibe, but experimental evidence for this kind of global change was lacking.
 
 
Winograd and colleagues decided to bring the question into the lab, where they could carefully calibrate alcohol consumption and closely monitor individual behaviour. They recruited 156 participants, who completed an initial survey gauging their typical alcohol consumption and their perceptions of their own "typical sober" personality and "typical drunk" personality.
 
Later, the participants came to the lab in friend groups of 3 or 4, where the researchers administered a baseline breathalyzer test and measured the participants' height and weight. Over the course of about 15 minutes, each participant consumed beverages - some drank Sprite, while others consumed individually-tailored vodka and Sprite cocktails designed to produce a blood alcohol content of about .09.
 
After a 15-minute absorption period, the friends worked through a series of fun group activities, including discussion questions and logic puzzles, intended to elicit a variety of personality traits and behaviours.
 
The participants completed personality measures at two points during the lab session. And outside observers used video recordings to complete standardized assessments of each individual's personality traits.
 
As expected, participants' ratings indicated change in all five of the major personality factors. After drinking, participants reported lower levels of conscientiousness, openness to experience, and agreeableness, and they reported higher levels of extraversion and emotional stability (the inverse of neuroticism).
 
 
The observers, on the other hand, noted fewer differences across the sober and intoxicated participants' personality traits. In fact, observer ratings indicated reliable differences in only one personality factor: extraversion. Specifically, participants who had consumed alcohol were rated higher on three facets of extraversion: gregariousness, assertiveness, and levels of activity.
 
Given that extraversion is the most outwardly visible personality factor, it makes sense that both parties noted differences in this trait, the researchers argue.
 
They acknowledge, however, that they cannot rule out other influences - such as participants' own expectations of their drunk personality - that may have contributed to the discrepancy in ratings.
 
The study is published in Clinical Psychological Science.

MORE Health ARTICLES

How the Ebola virus got its name

How the Ebola virus got its name
The deadly Ebola virus that has killed over 3,300 people in West Africa since its current outbreak was confirmed in March, was christened in 1976 after a river....

How the Ebola virus got its name

Faecal capsules may treat gut infection

Faecal capsules may treat gut infection
C. difficile bacteria live harmlessly in many people's guts alongside hundreds of other species - all competing for space and food. But some antibiotics can kill C...

Faecal capsules may treat gut infection

High cholesterol ups risk of prostate cancer recurrence

High cholesterol ups risk of prostate cancer recurrence
Higher levels of cholesterol and triglycerides, two types of fat, in the blood of men who underwent surgery for prostate cancer, may increase risk of disease recurrence, says a study....

High cholesterol ups risk of prostate cancer recurrence

Healthy lifestyles reduces bowel cancer risk in men

Healthy lifestyles reduces bowel cancer risk in men
Men who opt for multiple healthy lifestyle behaviours are at less risk of developing bowel cancer than women, a significant study shows....

Healthy lifestyles reduces bowel cancer risk in men

Don't ignore your child's leg pain, experts warn

Don't ignore your child's leg pain, experts warn
Does your child complain of pain in the leg? Don't ignore this as "growing up pain" but consider it as a signal for bone or knee-related ailments in the future, health experts caution....

Don't ignore your child's leg pain, experts warn

Frustration turns to tears of joy as gay couples get marriage licenses, head to Vegas chapels

Frustration turns to tears of joy as gay couples get marriage licenses, head to Vegas chapels
LAS VEGAS - Daniel Carroll and Dayvin Bartolome stood on the steps of the marriage license bureau in Las Vegas, researching where they might tie the knot after 14 years together.

Frustration turns to tears of joy as gay couples get marriage licenses, head to Vegas chapels