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Original Articles

Examining fast and slow effects for alcohol and negative emotion in problem and social drinkers

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Pages 24-33 | Received 09 Jun 2013, Accepted 02 May 2014, Published online: 13 Jun 2014
 

Abstract

Attentional bias (AB) for alcohol-related stimuli has been consistently demonstrated in social and problem drinkers. The aims of this study were to: investigate whether AB for alcohol-related stimuli could be described as a slow effect as well as a fast effect; how these effects relate to drinking behaviour; and the influence of the experimental procedure on priming effects. Two experiments were designed. In experiment 1, problem drinkers in treatment at a community alcohol service (N = 62) and a group of social drinking controls (N = 60) were assessed using the modified Stroop task with alcohol, negative emotion and neutral words. Drinking patterns were also recorded on the Khavari Alcohol Test. In experiment 2, social drinking controls (N = 40) completed the same procedure but were blinded to the study’s aims. In experiment 1, both groups demonstrated slower response times to alcohol-related than neutral stimuli in both fast and slow processes. Difference scores for alcohol compared to neutral words in the slow process were positively correlated with increases in drinking levels for both groups. In experiment 2, AB to alcohol-related stimuli disappeared when participants were unprimed. The findings highlight the importance of investigating the role of fast and slow processes in continued and problem drinking, alongside priming effects from the experimental procedure.

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to acknowledge thank Bill Reading for his assistance in this research.

Declaration of interest

The authors report no conflicts of interest. The authors alone are responsible for the content and writing of the article.

This research study was supported by a small research grant from Alcohol Research UK (SG 08/09 103).

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