We experimentally investigate the dissociative single ionization process, O 2 → O + + O, of aligned O 2 molecule in intense laser fields. The yield of a vibrational structure in the kinetic energy release spectra is measured as a function of alignment angle. By quantitative comparison of the measured angle-dependent dissociation probability with the simulation of a classical model that considers ionization and thus additional interaction within the laser pulse, we are able to distinguish the dissociation pathway that contribute to the vibrational structure. It is found that for a relative low laser intensity, the vibrational structure are produced from the dissociation pathway of a 4Π u → f 4Π g − 1ω. As the laser intensity increases, the increasing of the population probability of higher vibrational states and the absorbtion probability of more photons makes another two dissociation pathways open and become dominant.