RATIONALE: Many studies have reported the long-term adverse effects of alcohol on executive cognitive function in chronic alcohol abusers, yet little research has investigated the acute effects of alcohol in social drinkers. Studies on acute effects report alcohol-induced deficits on tasks that require executive cognitive processes, with alcohol acting to increase preservative errors and reduce planning. AIM: The present investigation examines the acute effects of a moderate dose of alcohol on a decision-making task that involves participants making a forced choice between two simultaneously presented binary-outcome gambles. METHODS: Alcohol (0.6 g/kg) or placebo was administered to 32 social drinkers. Participants completed the task, makin...
Background: Patients who are diagnosed with alcohol-dependent syndrome (ADS) are shown to have neuro...
Rationale: Gambling and alcohol use are recreational behaviours that share substantial commonaliti...
Alcohol consumption may lead to deficits in the executive functions that govern self-regulation. How...
The study analyzed decision making under ambiguity and risk, impulsivity, and acute effects of alcoh...
textabstractRationale: Although risky decision-making is one of the hallmarks of alcohol use disorde...
Research suggests that the drinking environment can affect dynamic processes involved in group decis...
Research suggests that the drinking environment can affect dynamic processes involved in group decis...
Alcohol dependence is associated with poor decision-making under ambiguity, that is, when decisions ...
It is notoriously hard to study the effect of alcohol on decision making, given the selection that t...
Background: Studies in humans and animals suggest a shift from goal-directed to habitual decision-m...
Objectives: The relationship between substance dependence and poor decision making has received much...
AIMS: To estimate the effect of acute alcohol consumption on risk-taking while gambling, examine blo...
Alcohol consumption has been associated with failure in self-regulation, which can resul...
RATIONALE: A bidirectional relationship between alcohol use disorder (AUD) and deficits in impulse c...
Introduction: Acute alcohol intoxication has been found to increase perseverative errors on the Wisc...
Background: Patients who are diagnosed with alcohol-dependent syndrome (ADS) are shown to have neuro...
Rationale: Gambling and alcohol use are recreational behaviours that share substantial commonaliti...
Alcohol consumption may lead to deficits in the executive functions that govern self-regulation. How...
The study analyzed decision making under ambiguity and risk, impulsivity, and acute effects of alcoh...
textabstractRationale: Although risky decision-making is one of the hallmarks of alcohol use disorde...
Research suggests that the drinking environment can affect dynamic processes involved in group decis...
Research suggests that the drinking environment can affect dynamic processes involved in group decis...
Alcohol dependence is associated with poor decision-making under ambiguity, that is, when decisions ...
It is notoriously hard to study the effect of alcohol on decision making, given the selection that t...
Background: Studies in humans and animals suggest a shift from goal-directed to habitual decision-m...
Objectives: The relationship between substance dependence and poor decision making has received much...
AIMS: To estimate the effect of acute alcohol consumption on risk-taking while gambling, examine blo...
Alcohol consumption has been associated with failure in self-regulation, which can resul...
RATIONALE: A bidirectional relationship between alcohol use disorder (AUD) and deficits in impulse c...
Introduction: Acute alcohol intoxication has been found to increase perseverative errors on the Wisc...
Background: Patients who are diagnosed with alcohol-dependent syndrome (ADS) are shown to have neuro...
Rationale: Gambling and alcohol use are recreational behaviours that share substantial commonaliti...
Alcohol consumption may lead to deficits in the executive functions that govern self-regulation. How...