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Los estímulos contextuales visuales y auditivos impactan de manera diferenciada el control inhibitorio relacionado con el alcohol
Author(s) -
Adam Qureshi,
Rebecca L. Monk,
Charlotte R. Pennington,
Xiaoyun Li,
Thomas Leatherbarrow,
Jennifer Oulton
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
adicciones
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.953
H-Index - 30
eISSN - 2604-6334
pISSN - 0214-4840
DOI - 10.20882/adicciones.1091
Subject(s) - saccade , psychology , audiology , alcohol , alcohol consumption , eye tracking , sensory cue , eye movement , alcohol intoxication , cognitive psychology , poison control , medicine , injury prevention , neuroscience , computer science , chemistry , biochemistry , computer vision , environmental health
Representing a more immersive testing environment, the current study exposed individuals to both alcohol-related visual and auditory cues to assess their respective impact on alcohol-related inhibitory control. It examined further whether individual variation in alcohol consumption and trait effortful control may predict inhibitory control performance. Twenty-five U.K. university students (Mage = 23.08, SD = 8.26) completed an anti-saccade eye-tracking task and were instructed to look towards (pro) or directly away (anti) from alcohol-related and neutral visual stimuli. Short alcohol-related sound cues (bar audio) were played on 50% of trials and were compared with responses where no sounds were played. Findings indicate that participants launched more incorrect saccades towards alcohol-related visual stimuli on anti-saccade trials, and responded quicker to alcohol on pro-saccade trials. Alcohol-related audio cues reduced latencies for both pro- and anti-saccade trials and reduced anti-saccade error rates to alcohol-related visual stimuli. Controlling for trait effortful control and problem alcohol consumption removed these effects. These findings suggest that alcohol-related visual cues may be associated with reduced inhibitory control, evidenced by increased errors and faster response latencies. The presentation of alcohol-related auditory cues, however, appears to enhance performance accuracy. It is postulated that auditory cues may re-contextualise visual stimuli into a more familiar setting that reduces their saliency and lessens their attentional pull.

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