Dougherty D M, Marsh D M, Moeller F G, Chokshi R V, Rosen V C
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Texas-Houston Health Science Center 77030, USA.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2000 Nov;24(11):1702-11.
Prior studies that examined the effects of alcohol on Continuous Performance Test (CPT) performance have resulted in inconsistent outcomes. Most studies that examined the effects of alcohol on concentrated attention tasks (like the CPT) found little effect of alcohol on performance measures, even when doses that exceeded 0.8 g/kg were used. One likely reason for these inconsistencies is the varying difficulty (and sensitivity) of the task used, and as a result, comparisons between studies are difficult. This study is one in a series that examines the effects of alcohol on attention by using a difficult version of the CPT (Immediate and Delayed Memory Task--IMT/DMT). Our purpose for these studies has been two-fold, examining the effects of alcohol (1) on concentrated attention (i.e., correct detections) and (2) on errors (i.e., commission errors) previously correlated with impulsive behaviors. The first is important because previous studies have shown little effect of alcohol on attention, and the second is important because commission errors have been related to impulsive behaviors.
In the IMT/DMT, participants respond to a briefly displayed number when it is identical to the one displayed before it. The procedure includes immediate and delayed conditions where successive stimuli to be matched are delayed by 0.5 sec or by 3.5 sec. The three stimulus types included target (identical match), catch (four of five digits match), and filler (no match) stimuli. Twenty subjects completed this task after consuming either a placebo drink or a drink that contained 0.5 g/kg or 1.0 g/kg of alcohol on different days.
The main findings were that (1) alcohol decreased the percentage of correct identifications of target stimuli; (2) alcohol increased the percentage of commission errors in relation to the number of correct target responses; and (3) alcohol decreased discriminability whereas response bias became more conservative.
These results clearly demonstrated a time-course effect of the 1.0 g/kg alcohol dose on attention, impulsivity, discrimination, and response criteria when a variety of dependent measures are used.
先前研究酒精对连续性能测试(CPT)表现影响的结果并不一致。大多数研究酒精对集中注意力任务(如CPT)影响时发现,即使使用超过0.8克/千克的剂量,酒精对表现指标的影响也很小。这些不一致的一个可能原因是所使用任务的难度(和敏感性)不同,因此,研究之间难以进行比较。本研究是一系列通过使用困难版CPT(即时和延迟记忆任务——IMT/DMT)来研究酒精对注意力影响的研究之一。我们进行这些研究的目的有两个,一是研究酒精对集中注意力(即正确检测)的影响,二是研究酒精对先前与冲动行为相关的错误(即委托错误)的影响。第一个目的很重要,因为先前研究表明酒精对注意力影响不大;第二个目的也很重要,因为委托错误与冲动行为有关。
在IMT/DMT中,当短暂显示的数字与之前显示的数字相同时,参与者做出反应。该程序包括即时和延迟条件,即要匹配的连续刺激分别延迟0.5秒或3.5秒。三种刺激类型包括目标(相同匹配)、捕捉(五位数字中有四位匹配)和填充(无匹配)刺激。20名受试者在不同日期分别饮用安慰剂饮料或含有0.5克/千克或1.0克/千克酒精的饮料后完成该任务。
主要发现为:(1)酒精降低了目标刺激正确识别的百分比;(2)与正确目标反应数量相关的委托错误百分比增加;(3)酒精降低了辨别力,而反应偏差变得更加保守。
当使用多种相关测量方法时,这些结果清楚地证明了1.0克/千克酒精剂量对注意力、冲动性、辨别力和反应标准的时程效应。