Abstract

RationaleExperimental tasks that demonstrate alcohol-related attentional bias typically expose participants to single-stimulus targets (e.g. addiction Stroop, visual probe, anti-saccade task), which may not correspond fully with real-world contexts where alcoholic and non-alcoholic cues simultaneously compete for attention. Moreover, alcoholic stimuli are rarely matched to other appetitive non-alcoholic stimuli.ObjectivesTo address these limitations by utilising a conjunction search eye-tracking task and matched stimuli to examine alcohol-related attentional bias.MethodsThirty social drinkers (Mage = 19.87, SD = 1.74) were asked to detect whether alcoholic (beer), non-alcoholic (water) or non-appetitive (detergent) targets were present or absent amongst a visual array of matching and non-matching distractors. Both behavioural response times and eye-movement dwell time were measured.ResultsSocial drinkers were significantly quicker to detect alcoholic and non-alcoholic appetitive targets relative to non-appetitive targets in an array of matching and mismatching distractors. Similarly, proportional dwell time was lower for both alcoholic and non-alcoholic appetitive distractors relative to non-appetitive distractors, suggesting that appetitive targets were relatively easier to detect.ConclusionsSocial drinkers may exhibit generalised attentional bias towards alcoholic and non-alcoholic appetitive cues. This adds to emergent research suggesting that the mechanisms driving these individual’s attention towards alcoholic cues might ‘spill over’ to other appetitive cues, possibly due to associative learning.

Highlights

  • Attentional bias (AB) is the tendency for an individual’s focus to be drawn to certain preferred cues, and a wealth of researchThe data in this paper were presented in poster format at the Society for Psychophysiological Research Annual Meeting, 3–7 October 2018

  • The same analyses were conducted on proportional dwell time

  • The time spent by participants gazing in various areas of interest (AOI) was automatically calculated by Experiment Builder through the Data Viewer

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Summary

Introduction

Attentional bias (AB) is the tendency for an individual’s focus to be drawn to certain preferred cues, and a wealth of researchThe data in this paper were presented in poster format at the Society for Psychophysiological Research Annual Meeting, 3–7 October 2018. Attentional bias (AB) is the tendency for an individual’s focus to be drawn to certain preferred cues, and a wealth of research. Suggests that this process may underpin addictive behaviours (see Field and Cox 2008 for a review). Studies have shown that both dependent (Cox et al 2002) and non-dependent drinkers (Melaugh-McAteer et al 2015) display AB towards alcohol-related stimuli, which appears to be proportionally determined by individual differences in consumption (Field et al 2014). It is postulated that repeated consumption causes alcohol-related stimuli to acquire incentive-motivational properties, which potentiates attentional resources and encourages further use. In other words, being motivated to consume alcohol alters the way in which associated cues are perceived to influence attentional orienting (Field and Cox 2008; Field et al 2014)

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