Alcohol and driving-related performance : a comprehensive meta-analysis focusing the significance of the non-significant. Dissertation Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg.

Author(s)
Schnabel, E.
Year
Abstract

The present work reviews the experimental literature on the acute effects of alcohol on human behaviour related to driving performance. A meta-analysis was conducted which includes studies published between 1954 and 2007 in order to provide a comprehensive knowledge of the substance alcohol. 450 studies reporting 5,300 findings were selected from over 12,000 references after applying certain in- and exclusion criteria. Thus, the present meta-analysis comprises far more studies than reviews on alcohol up to now. In the selected studies, different performance tests were conducted which were relevant for driving. The classification system used in this work assigns these tests to eight categories. The main categories consist of several sub categories classifying the tasks more precisely. The main categories were: (1) visual functions, (2) attention (including vigilance), (3) divided attention, (4) en-/decoding (including information processing and memory), (5) reaction time (including simple reaction time and choice reaction time), (6) psychomotor skills, (7) tracking and (8) driving. In addition to the performance aspect, the classification system takes into account mood and social behaviour variables related to driving safety like tiredness or aggression. (Author/publisher)

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Publication

Library number
20131193 ST [electronic version only]
Source

Würzburg, Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg, 2012, 221 p., ref.

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