The Effects of Placebo and Moderate Dose Alcohol on Attentional Bias, Inhibitory Control and Subjective Craving

Author:

McNeill Adam M1ORCID,Monk Rebecca L23ORCID,Qureshi Adam W23,Litchfield Damien2,Heim Derek23

Affiliation:

1. School of Social Sciences, Birmingham City University, 4 Cardigan Street, Birmingham B4 7BD, UK

2. Department of Psychology, Edge Hill University, St Helens Road, Ormskirk L39 4QP, UK

3. Liverpool Alcohol Research Centre, Crown Street, Liverpool L69 3BX, UK

Abstract

Abstract Aims Previous research indicates that acute alcohol intoxication and placebo can inhibit people’s control over consumption behaviour and heighten attentional bias (AB) towards alcohol-related stimuli and craving. We designed a study to disentangle anticipated from pharmacological effects of alcohol in order to gain a clearer view of their relative contributions to alcohol consumption. Methods In a within-participants design (moderate alcohol dose, placebo and control), and over a minimum 2-week period, participants completed a battery of questionnaires and cognitive tasks, followed by a bogus taste task to measure ad libitum consumption. Results Both alcohol preload and placebo resulted in cognitive and psychological changes, including impaired inhibitory control, heightened AB and craving. However, ad libitum consumption only increased following alcohol and not placebo. Furthermore, inhibitory control impairments did not mediate the relationship between initial intoxication and ad libitum consumption, and findings indicate that increases in craving may mediate this association. Conclusion Psychological processes such as craving may be more important in driving consummatory behaviour relative to transient changes in cognitive processes, such as inhibitory control.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Medicine

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