Rationale: Drug-related cues may acquire incentive properties through classical conditioning. Objective: The present study investigated whether arbitrary stimuli paired with a low dose of alcohol would evoke differential skin conductance, salivary, craving and attentional orienting responses compared to arbitrary stimuli paired with vehicle in a sample of social drinkers. Methods: A discriminative classical conditioning procedure was employed, in which subjects repeatedly consumed two drinks, which differed in terms of the flavour of the drink and the colour of the glass in which it was administered. One of the drinks (CS+) always contained 0.2 g/kg ethanol in flavoured tonic water and the other drink (CS-) always contained flavoured tonic ...
Rationale—Laboratory paradigms are useful for investigating mechanisms of human alcohol cue reactivi...
Background: The use of alcohol is associated with various forms of automatic processing, such as ap...
[ACCESS RESTRICTED TO THE UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI AT REQUEST OF AUTHOR.] The Incentive Sensitization ...
Rationale: Although well characterised in animals, relatively little is known about alcohol discrimi...
Previous research shows that dependent drinkers respond more strongly to alcohol-related cues and su...
Abstract. Recent experiments with human subjects have shown that drug cues (e.g. sight of beer or ne...
Aims: To assess whether cognitive biases for drug-related cues are associated with subjective cravin...
Aims. To investigate the role of sensitivity to reward in mediating social drinkers' reactivity to a...
Rationale Heavy alcohol drinking increases the incentive salience of alcohol-related cues. This lea...
Abstract — Aims: The aim of this study was to assess the impact of cues that signal the alcoholic st...
Introduction: Cue-reactivity is thought to play a fundamental role in the maintenance of addiction. ...
Many studies have shown that regular drinkers react to alcohol-related stimuli (i.e., cue reactivity...
Abstract — Aims: To assess whether cognitive biases for drug-related cues are associated with subjec...
RATIONALE: Previous research has demonstrated a role for impulsivity and perceived availability of t...
RATIONALE: Exploring subjective alcohol cue reactivity in non-clinical samples should assist underst...
Rationale—Laboratory paradigms are useful for investigating mechanisms of human alcohol cue reactivi...
Background: The use of alcohol is associated with various forms of automatic processing, such as ap...
[ACCESS RESTRICTED TO THE UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI AT REQUEST OF AUTHOR.] The Incentive Sensitization ...
Rationale: Although well characterised in animals, relatively little is known about alcohol discrimi...
Previous research shows that dependent drinkers respond more strongly to alcohol-related cues and su...
Abstract. Recent experiments with human subjects have shown that drug cues (e.g. sight of beer or ne...
Aims: To assess whether cognitive biases for drug-related cues are associated with subjective cravin...
Aims. To investigate the role of sensitivity to reward in mediating social drinkers' reactivity to a...
Rationale Heavy alcohol drinking increases the incentive salience of alcohol-related cues. This lea...
Abstract — Aims: The aim of this study was to assess the impact of cues that signal the alcoholic st...
Introduction: Cue-reactivity is thought to play a fundamental role in the maintenance of addiction. ...
Many studies have shown that regular drinkers react to alcohol-related stimuli (i.e., cue reactivity...
Abstract — Aims: To assess whether cognitive biases for drug-related cues are associated with subjec...
RATIONALE: Previous research has demonstrated a role for impulsivity and perceived availability of t...
RATIONALE: Exploring subjective alcohol cue reactivity in non-clinical samples should assist underst...
Rationale—Laboratory paradigms are useful for investigating mechanisms of human alcohol cue reactivi...
Background: The use of alcohol is associated with various forms of automatic processing, such as ap...
[ACCESS RESTRICTED TO THE UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI AT REQUEST OF AUTHOR.] The Incentive Sensitization ...