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Original

Alcohol Abusers' and Nonabusers' Distraction by Alcohol and Concern-Related Stimuli

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Pages 489-495 | Published online: 07 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Alcohol abusers' and nonabusers' attentional distraction for neutral, alcohol-related, and concern-related (personally relevant) words was assessed with a word-word color-naming task. Abusers, unlike nonabusers, showed greater attentional distraction for alcohol-related than concern-related words. Exploratory analyses indicated that abusers who were more distracted by alcohol-related than concern-related stimuli (i.e., “alcohol distracted”) responded more slowly to neutral words than “concern-distracted” participants. The results suggest that the relative degree of distraction by alcohol versus other personally relevant stimuli holds promise for understanding the cognitive and motivational processes underlying alcohol abuse.

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