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Just The Thought Of A Glass Of Wine Can Help You To Relax!

by VR Sreeraman on Jun 9 2012 5:26 PM

 Just The Thought Of A Glass Of Wine Can Help You To Relax!
Scientists have claimed that even the thought about a glass of wine can help one to relax.
According to researchers, people are so suggestive that simply believing an alcoholic drink will make us feel better or socialize more easily at a party will greatly raise the chance of making it so.

And they say this happens because of the phenomenon of "response expectancies", or the way in which we predict how we will behave in different situations, the Telegraph reported.

Because we expect that alcohol will make us more relaxed, for example, we automatically respond by becoming more open and chattier in a subconscious attempt to meet our expectation, psychologists explained.

Although most people would put the effect solely down to the alcohol, some studies suggest that our expectations of how the drink will make us feel also play a key role.

Researchers from Victoria University in New Zealand wrote in the Current Directions in Psychological Science journal that "the effects of suggestion are wider and often more surprising than many people might otherwise think."

Various other studies have shown that the power of suggestion can help people perform better in tests and even influence how well they respond to drug treatments, also known as the "placebo effect".

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Now certain experiments are showing that this also extends to our own behavior, and that we change how we act and feel according to what we expect.

In one study cited by the authors, people who took a dummy drug that was allegedly supposed to make them feel more alert began to pay closer attention in a monitoring test because they expected the drug would make them do so.

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Asked how they felt after taking the drug, the patients said it made them feel more "alert" and "focused" and gave them "greater clarity of vision", reporting what they expected the effects of the drug would be.

The researchers said, "When we expect a particular outcome, we automatically set in motion a chain of cognitions and behaviors to produce that outcome - and mis-attribute its cause."

Source-ANI


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