Attentional bias associated with alcohol cues: differences between heavy and occasional social drinkers

被引:0
|
作者
J. Townshend
T. Duka
机构
[1] Laboratory of Experimental Psychology,
[2] University of Sussex,undefined
[3] Falmer,undefined
[4] Brighton BN1 9QG,undefined
[5] UK,undefined
来源
Psychopharmacology | 2001年 / 157卷
关键词
Alcohol expectancy Emotional bias Executive function CANTAB;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Rationale: Previous research has shown an attentional bias toward drug-related stimuli in opiate addicts and toward emotionally threatening words in anxiety patients. Objective: The primary aim of this study was to investigate whether non-dependent heavy social drinkers would differ in their selective attention towards alcohol-related stimuli in comparison with a group of occasional social drinkers. Methods: Attentional bias was assessed using alcohol-related pictures and words in a dot probe detection task. Picture and word pairs were visually presented, followed by a dot probe that replaced one of the items. Attentional bias was determined from latencies in responding to the dot probe. Questionnaires were used to examine the relationships among attention, outcome expectancies after alcohol consumption, and personality traits. Higher-order executive function was also measured with two cognitive tasks, recognition memory and attentional shift. Results: The heavy social drinkers showed an attentional bias towards the alcohol-related stimuli when compared to the occasional social drinkers. The heavy social drinkers also scored more highly on expectancy factors of sociability and sexuality and lower on the personality traits of self-directedness and persistence. Conclusion: The results support cognitive theories of addictive behaviour in which the ability of drug-related stimuli to capture attention is suggested to play a part in drug dependence, craving and relapse.
引用
收藏
页码:67 / 74
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Craving Mediates the Association Between Attentional Bias to Alcohol and in vivo Alcoholic Beverage Consumption in Young Social Drinkers
    Cahill, Christopher
    White, Melanie J.
    MacLeod, Colin
    Grafton, Ben
    [J]. PSYCHOLOGY OF ADDICTIVE BEHAVIORS, 2021, 35 (08) : 895 - 900
  • [22] Persistence of attentional bias toward alcohol-related stimuli in intoxicated social drinkers
    Miller, Melissa A.
    Fillmore, Mark T.
    [J]. DRUG AND ALCOHOL DEPENDENCE, 2011, 117 (2-3) : 184 - 189
  • [23] Attentional blink to alcohol cues in binge drinkers versus non-binge drinkers
    DePalma, Francesco M.
    Ceballos, Natalie
    Graham, Reiko
    [J]. ADDICTIVE BEHAVIORS, 2017, 73 : 67 - 73
  • [24] INDIVIDUAL ALCOHOL SENSITIVITY AND ATTENTIONAL BIAS TOWARD ALCOHOL CUES
    Shin, E.
    Lust, S. A.
    Henry, E. A.
    Bartholow, B. D.
    [J]. ALCOHOLISM-CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH, 2009, 33 (06) : 147A - 147A
  • [25] Rapid approach responses to alcohol cues in heavy drinkers
    Field, Matt
    Kiernan, Anna
    Eastwood, Brian
    Child, Robert
    [J]. JOURNAL OF BEHAVIOR THERAPY AND EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHIATRY, 2008, 39 (03) : 209 - 218
  • [26] Adolescent and Current Binge Drinking Predict Changes in Attentional Bias to Alcohol Related Cues After Acute Dopamine Depletion in Male Social Drinkers
    Faulkner, Monica
    Paulson, Ambika
    Harvey, Lauryn
    Robinson, Donita
    Boettiger, Charlotte
    [J]. NEUROPSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY, 2018, 43 : S206 - S207
  • [27] A pictorial Stroop paradigm reveals an alcohol attentional bias in heavier compared to lighter social drinkers
    Bruce, G
    Jones, BT
    [J]. JOURNAL OF PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY, 2004, 18 (04) : 527 - +
  • [28] Differences in alcohol expectancy between aggressive and nonaggressive social drinkers
    Bjork, JM
    Dougherty, DM
    [J]. ALCOHOLISM-CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH, 1998, 22 (09) : 1943 - 1950
  • [29] Sleep and circadian differences between light and heavy adult alcohol drinkers
    Burgess, Helen J.
    Rizvydeen, Muneer
    Kikyo, Fumitaka
    Kebbeh, Nema
    Tan, Michael
    Roecklein, Kathryn A.
    Hasler, Brant P.
    King, Andrea C.
    Cao, Dingcai
    [J]. ALCOHOL-CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH, 2022, 46 (07): : 1181 - 1191
  • [30] SEX DIFFERENCES IN NEURAL RESPONSES TO STRESS AND ALCOHOL CUES AMONG RISKY SOCIAL DRINKERS
    Martins, J. S.
    Lacadie, C. M.
    Sinha, R.
    Seo, D.
    [J]. ALCOHOLISM-CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH, 2022, 46 : 109A - 109A