Abstract

Previous research has found that the attention of social drinkers is preferentially oriented towards alcohol-related stimuli (attentional capture). This is argued to play a role in escalating craving for alcohol that can result in hazardous drinking. According to incentive theories of drug addiction, the stimuli associated with the drug reward acquire learned incentive salience and grab attention. However, it is not clear whether the mechanism by which this bias is created is a voluntary or an automatic one, although some evidence suggests a stimulus-driven mechanism. Here, we test for the first time whether this attentional capture could reflect an involuntary consequence of a goal-driven mechanism. Across three experiments, participants were given search goals to detect either an alcoholic or a non-alcoholic object (target) in a stream of briefly presented objects unrelated to the target. Prior to the target, a task-irrelevant parafoveal distractor appeared. This could either be congruent or incongruent with the current search goal. Applying a meta-analysis, we combined the results across the three experiments and found consistent evidence of goal-driven attentional capture, whereby alcohol distractors impeded target detection when the search goal was for alcohol. By contrast, alcohol distractors did not interfere with target detection, whilst participants were searching for a non-alcoholic category. A separate experiment revealed that the goal-driven capture effect was not found when participants held alcohol features active in memory but did not intentionally search for them. These findings suggest a strong goal-driven account of attentional capture by alcohol cues in social drinkers.

Highlights

  • Previous research has found that the attention of social drinkers is preferentially oriented towards alcohol-related stimuli

  • An initial review of the participants’ self-reported drinking-related scores from experiments 1a, 1b, 1c, and 2 revealed that they were within the range of previous investigations, which found attentional biases towards alcohol cues (Tibboel et al 2010, Ramirez et al 2015, Sharma et al 2001, DePalma et al 2017, see Table 1)

  • We note that the samples contained a large number of participants who would likely attribute incentive value to the alcohol stimuli: 98% of participants reported expecting some degree of positive arousing outcome from consuming alcohol; 78% were classed as problem drinkers by the Alcohol Use Disorder Identification Test (AUDIT) and at risk of substance dependence, and 52% were classified as binge drinkers on the Alcohol Use Questionnaire (AUQ)

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Summary

Introduction

Previous research has found that the attention of social drinkers is preferentially oriented towards alcohol-related stimuli (attentional capture). According to incentive theories of drug addiction, the stimuli associated with the drug reward acquire learned incentive salience and grab attention It is not clear whether the mechanism by which this bias is created is a voluntary or an automatic one, some evidence suggests a stimulus-driven mechanism. A separate experiment revealed that the goal-driven capture effect was not found when participants held alcohol features active in memory but did not intentionally search for them. These findings suggest a strong goal-driven account of attentional capture by alcohol cues in social drinkers. The current investigation, will, aim to test whether the attentional bias could alternatively be accounted for by a goal-driven attentional mechanism

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