Blood alcohol level discrimination by young male nonalcoholics in a social setting.

Author(s)
Smith, D.I. King, A.G.S. Leong, Y.M & Mateljan, J.G.
Year
Abstract

As a result of all previous blood alcohol level (BAL) discrimination research with non-alcoholics having been conducted in laboratory settings with very short followup periods and relatively low BALs, the implication of such training for improved traffic safety was not known. In a series of weekly drinking sessions 9 young males who frequently consumed liquor together received training in BAL discrimination. It is shown that subjects had not retained their discrimination ability four months after the test period.

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Publication

Library number
B 24768 fo /83.4/
Source

From: Man, Drugs and Society-Current perspectives. Proceedings of the first Pan-Pacific Conference on Drugs and Alcohol, Canberra, Australia, February 26 to March 5, 1980, p.469-473, 7 tab., 10 ref.

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This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.