Schweizer Tom A, Jolicoeur Pierre, Vogel-Sprott M, Dixon Mike J
Department of Psychology, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2004 Apr;28(4):643-9. doi: 10.1097/01.alc.0000121652.84754.30.
Although moderate doses of alcohol can impair performance on tasks that require information processing, little is known about the locus of the alcohol effects within the processing stream. This study used a psychological refractory period paradigm to investigate the effect of alcohol on the central, cognitive stage of information processing when task complexity is manipulated by altering stimulus-response compatibility.
Thirty-four healthy male social drinkers were assigned to one of two groups (n = 17) that performed two tasks. Each trial consisted of a task 1 stimulus (tone) followed by a task 2 stimulus (letter) that was presented after one of four stimulus onset asynchronies (50, 200, 500, or 1100 msec). A baseline test of performance was obtained before the groups received a beverage containing either 0.0 g/kg (placebo) or 0.65 g/kg alcohol. Both groups were retested when blood alcohol concentration (BAC) was increasing and was decreasing.
The alcohol group made significantly more errors in task 1 compared with their drug-free baseline measure during the ascending phase of the BAC curve, and error rates increased to a greater extent for the more complex arbitrary stimulus-response mapping condition. Moreover, this increase in errors continued unabated during the descending phase of the BAC curve. Increasing BACs also slowed performance (longer reaction time), but unlike errors, reaction time returned to drug-free baseline levels when BAC was decreasing.
The results provide evidence that an acute dose of alcohol can impair one aspect of the central, cognitive stages of information processing. The possibility that errors in information processing remain during decreasing BACs even after processing speed has returned to drug-free levels has important practical implications relating to the detrimental consequences of acute alcohol intoxication.
尽管适量饮酒会损害需要信息处理的任务表现,但对于酒精在处理流程中的作用位点知之甚少。本研究采用心理不应期范式,通过改变刺激-反应兼容性来操纵任务复杂性,以探究酒精对信息处理的中枢认知阶段的影响。
34名健康男性社交饮酒者被分为两组(每组n = 17),进行两项任务。每次试验包括任务1刺激(音调),随后是任务2刺激(字母),在四个刺激起始异步时间(50、200、500或1100毫秒)之一后呈现。在两组接受含有0.0 g/kg(安慰剂)或0.65 g/kg酒精的饮料之前,先进行一次表现的基线测试。当血液酒精浓度(BAC)上升和下降时,两组均再次进行测试。
在BAC曲线上升阶段,与无酒精基线测量相比,酒精组在任务1中犯的错误明显更多,并且在更复杂的任意刺激-反应映射条件下,错误率上升幅度更大。此外,在BAC曲线下降阶段,错误的增加仍未减弱。BAC升高也会减慢表现(反应时间更长),但与错误不同的是,当BAC下降时,反应时间会恢复到无酒精基线水平。
结果提供了证据表明急性剂量的酒精会损害信息处理的中枢认知阶段的一个方面。即使处理速度已恢复到无酒精水平,但在BAC下降期间信息处理中的错误仍然存在,这种可能性对于急性酒精中毒的有害后果具有重要的实际意义。