Department of Psychology, University of Kentucky College of Arts and Sciences, 110 Kastle Hall, Lexington, KY, 40506-0044, USA.
Department of Psychology, University of Kentucky College of Arts and Sciences, 110 Kastle Hall, Lexington, KY, 40506-0044, USA.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2020 Apr 1;209:107945. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2020.107945. Epub 2020 Feb 27.
Humans interact with multiple stimuli across several modalities each day. The "redundant signal effect" refers to the observation that individuals respond more quickly to stimuli when information is presented as multisensory, redundant stimuli (e.g., aurally and visually), rather than as a single stimulus presented to either modality alone. Studies of alcohol effects on human performance show that alcohol induced impairment is reduced when subjects respond to redundant multisensory stimuli. However, redundant signals do not need to involve multisensory stimuli to facilitate behavior as studies have shown facilitating effects by redundant unisensory signals that are delivered to the "same sensory" (e.g., two visual or two auditory signals).
The current study examined the degree to which redundant visual signals would reduce alcohol impairment and compared the magnitude of this effect with that produced by redundant multisensory signals. On repeated test sessions, participants (n = 20) received placebo or 0.65 g/kg alcohol and performed a two-choice reaction time task that measured how quickly participants responded to four different signal conditions. The four conditions differed by the modality of the target presentation: visual, auditory, multisensory, and unisensory.
Alcohol slowed performance in all conditions and reaction times were generally faster in the redundant signal conditions. Both multisensory and unisensory redundant signals reduced the impairing effects of alcohol compared with single signals.
These findings indicate that the ability of redundant signals to counteract alcohol impairment does not require multisensory input. Duplicate signals to the same modality can also reduce alcohol impairment.
人类每天都会与多种刺激物进行交互,涉及多个模态。“冗余信号效应”是指这样一种观察结果,即当信息以多感觉冗余刺激(例如听觉和视觉)呈现,而不是以单一刺激呈现给单一感觉模态时,个体对刺激的反应会更快。关于酒精对人类表现影响的研究表明,当受试者对冗余多感觉刺激做出反应时,酒精引起的损害会降低。然而,冗余信号不需要涉及多感觉刺激来促进行为,因为研究表明,向“同一感觉”(例如,两个视觉或两个听觉信号)传递冗余的单感觉信号也会产生促进作用。
本研究考察了冗余视觉信号在多大程度上可以减少酒精损害,并比较了这种效应的幅度与冗余多感觉信号产生的效应幅度。在重复的测试过程中,参与者(n = 20)接受安慰剂或 0.65 g/kg 酒精,并执行了一个二择一反应时任务,该任务测量了参与者对四种不同信号条件的反应速度。这四种条件的区别在于目标呈现的模态:视觉、听觉、多感觉和单感觉。
酒精在所有条件下都减缓了反应速度,而在冗余信号条件下反应时间通常更快。多感觉和单感觉冗余信号都比单一信号减少了酒精的损害作用。
这些发现表明,冗余信号抵消酒精损害的能力不需要多感觉输入。同一感觉模态的重复信号也可以减少酒精损害。