Aims To examine whether alcohol-related attentional bias (AB) can be reduced by training heavy drinkers to attend to soft drinks as an alternative to alcohol. Diminishing AB is important because AB has been suggested to be a significant factor in the development, maintenance and relapse of addictive behaviours. AB was trained in a clinically relevant design, and we studied the generalization of this training. Design, participants and intervention We assigned randomly 106 heavy drinking male college and university students to the attentional re-training (AR; modified visual-probe task) or control condition (standard visual-probe task). Setting Laboratory at Maastricht University. Measurements We measured the effects of AR on the visual-probe...
Training people to respond to alcohol images by making avoidance joystick movements can affect subse...
Training people to respond to alcohol images by making avoidance joystick movements can affect subse...
Rationale: Previous research has shown an attentional bias toward drug-related stimuli in opiate add...
Aims To examine whether alcohol-related attentional bias (AB) can be reduced by training heavy drin...
Aims To examine whether alcohol-related attentional bias (AB) can be reduced by training heavy drink...
Rationale In heavy drinkers, training attention towards alcohol cues increases alcohol craving, but ...
A new training to decrease attentional bias (attentional bias modification training, ABM) was tested...
Introduction Attentional biases for alcohol related information (AB) have often been reported for he...
A new training to decrease attentional bias (attentional bias modification training, ABM) was tested...
It is well-established that the attention of alcoholics compared with non alcoholics or social drink...
In an attempt to improve attention bias modification (ABM), we tested whether an attentional trainin...
Attention bias modification (ABM) can decrease the selective visual attention paid to alcohol-relate...
Rationale There has been considerable theoretical interest in attentional biases for drug-related c...
Rationale Heavy alcohol drinking increases the incentive salience of alcohol-related cues. This lea...
Training people to respond to alcohol images by making avoidance joystick movements can affect subse...
Training people to respond to alcohol images by making avoidance joystick movements can affect subse...
Rationale: Previous research has shown an attentional bias toward drug-related stimuli in opiate add...
Aims To examine whether alcohol-related attentional bias (AB) can be reduced by training heavy drin...
Aims To examine whether alcohol-related attentional bias (AB) can be reduced by training heavy drink...
Rationale In heavy drinkers, training attention towards alcohol cues increases alcohol craving, but ...
A new training to decrease attentional bias (attentional bias modification training, ABM) was tested...
Introduction Attentional biases for alcohol related information (AB) have often been reported for he...
A new training to decrease attentional bias (attentional bias modification training, ABM) was tested...
It is well-established that the attention of alcoholics compared with non alcoholics or social drink...
In an attempt to improve attention bias modification (ABM), we tested whether an attentional trainin...
Attention bias modification (ABM) can decrease the selective visual attention paid to alcohol-relate...
Rationale There has been considerable theoretical interest in attentional biases for drug-related c...
Rationale Heavy alcohol drinking increases the incentive salience of alcohol-related cues. This lea...
Training people to respond to alcohol images by making avoidance joystick movements can affect subse...
Training people to respond to alcohol images by making avoidance joystick movements can affect subse...
Rationale: Previous research has shown an attentional bias toward drug-related stimuli in opiate add...