Document Type
Article
Department/Program
Psychology
Journal Title
Psychopharmacology
Pub Date
5-2014
Volume
231
First Page
2031
Abstract
Rationale
Previous work has indicated that implicit attentional biases to alcohol-related cues are indicative of susceptibility to alcohol dependence and escape drinking, or drinking to avoid dysphoric mood or emotions.
Objective
The goal of the current study was to examine whether alcohol dependence and escape drinking were associated with early neural attentional biases to alcohol cues.
Methods
Electroencephalography data were recorded from 54 college students who reported that they regularly drank alcohol, while they viewed alcohol and control pictures that contained human content (active) or no human content (inactive).
Results
Those who were alcohol dependent showed more neural attentional bias to the active alcohol-related stimuli than to the matched control stimuli early in processing, as indicated by N1 amplitude. Escape drinkers showed greater neural attention to the active alcohol cues than non-escape drinkers, as measured by larger N2 amplitudes.
Conclusions
While alcohol dependence is associated with enhanced automatic attentional biases early in processing, escape drinking is associated with more controlled attentional biases to active alcohol cues during a relatively later stage in processing. These findings reveal important information about the time-course of attentional processing in problem drinkers and have important implications for addiction models and treatment.
Recommended Citation
Dickter, Cheryl L.; Forestell, Catherine A.; Hammett, Patrick J.; and Young, Chelsie M., Relationship Between Alcohol Dependence, Escape Drinking, and Early Neural Attention to Alcohol-related Cues (2014). Psychopharmacology, 231, 2031-2040.
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00213-013-3348-6
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00213-013-3348-6