Drinking alcohol appears to have no impact on self-perceptions of morality, aggressiveness, or intelligence.
Mariola Paruzel-CzachuraAgnieszka SorokowskaAmericus ReedPublished in: Experimental and clinical psychopharmacology (2023)
People generally perceive themselves as moral but does this tendency change after alcohol consumption? In the current research, we tested whether alcoholic intoxication affects self-assessments of morality (i.e., the self-importance of moral identity and the moral self-concept), and we also tested self-assessment of aggressiveness and intelligence. We conducted a preregistered laboratory experiment with participants divided into three groups: alcohol intoxication ( n = 106), placebo ( n = 114), and control condition ( n = 109). We did not detect statistically significant differences in self-assessments across conditions. These data are consistent with the conclusion that self-assessments of morality, aggressiveness, and intelligence may be too stable to be affected by the momentary changes in self-perception caused by alcoholic intoxication. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).