OBJECTIVE Intense alcohol consumption is a risk factor for a number of health problems. Dual-process models assume that self-regulatory behavior such as drinking alcohol is guided by both reflective and impulsive processes. Evidence suggests that (a) impulsive processes such as implicit attitudes are more strongly associated with behavior when executive functioning abilities are low, and (b) higher neural baseline activation in the lateral prefrontal cortex (PFC) is associated with better inhibitory control. The present study integrates these 2 strands of research to investigate how individual differences in neural baseline activation in the lateral PFC moderate the association between implicit alcohol attitudes and drinking behavior. METHO...
Emotional crossmodal integration (i.e. multisensorial decoding of emotions) is a crucial process tha...
Automatic attentional engagement toward and disengagement from alcohol cues play a role in alcohol u...
© 2019 American Association for the Advancement of Science. All rights reserved. What individual dif...
This research assessed activation in neural substrates involved in implicit associative processes th...
Contemporary dual-process models of alcohol abuse propose that alcohol abuse develops because of dys...
Behavioral studies have shown an alcohol-approach bias in alcohol-dependent patients: the automatic ...
AIMS: Research informed by dual-process models of addictions has clearly demonstrated an association...
The prefrontal cortex (PFC) plays a central role in guiding decision making, and its function is alt...
Aims: Research informed by dual-process models of addictions has clearly demonstrated an association...
This study examines associations between two measures of impulsivity and brain response to alcohol t...
Alcohol cues are prevalent in our everyday lives (on commercials and billboards, in grocery ads, etc...
The dual-process model, describing addictive disorders as resulting from an imbalance between increa...
Alcohol impairs inhibitory control, and it alters implicit alcohol cognitions including attentional ...
Even though the ventromedial neural network (reward pathway) has been well documented to be a mediat...
peer reviewedThe dual‐process model, describing addictive disorders as resulting from an imbalance ...
Emotional crossmodal integration (i.e. multisensorial decoding of emotions) is a crucial process tha...
Automatic attentional engagement toward and disengagement from alcohol cues play a role in alcohol u...
© 2019 American Association for the Advancement of Science. All rights reserved. What individual dif...
This research assessed activation in neural substrates involved in implicit associative processes th...
Contemporary dual-process models of alcohol abuse propose that alcohol abuse develops because of dys...
Behavioral studies have shown an alcohol-approach bias in alcohol-dependent patients: the automatic ...
AIMS: Research informed by dual-process models of addictions has clearly demonstrated an association...
The prefrontal cortex (PFC) plays a central role in guiding decision making, and its function is alt...
Aims: Research informed by dual-process models of addictions has clearly demonstrated an association...
This study examines associations between two measures of impulsivity and brain response to alcohol t...
Alcohol cues are prevalent in our everyday lives (on commercials and billboards, in grocery ads, etc...
The dual-process model, describing addictive disorders as resulting from an imbalance between increa...
Alcohol impairs inhibitory control, and it alters implicit alcohol cognitions including attentional ...
Even though the ventromedial neural network (reward pathway) has been well documented to be a mediat...
peer reviewedThe dual‐process model, describing addictive disorders as resulting from an imbalance ...
Emotional crossmodal integration (i.e. multisensorial decoding of emotions) is a crucial process tha...
Automatic attentional engagement toward and disengagement from alcohol cues play a role in alcohol u...
© 2019 American Association for the Advancement of Science. All rights reserved. What individual dif...