A diffusion model decomposition of the effects of alcohol on perceptual decision making.

Author(s)
Ravenzwaaij, D. van Dutilh, G. & Wagenmakers, E.-J.
Year
Abstract

Even in elementary cognitive tasks, alcohol consumption results in both cognitive and motor impairments. The purpose of this study is to quantify the latent psychological processes that underlie the alcohol-induced decrement in observed performance. Methods In a double-blind experiment, we administered three different amounts of alcohol to participants on different days: a placebo dose (0 g/l), a moderate dose (0.5 g/l), and a high dose (1 g/l). Following this, participants performed a 'moving dots' perceptual discrimination task. The authors analyzed the data using the drift diffusion model. Model parameters drift rate, boundary separation, and non-decision time allow a decomposition of the alcohol effect in terms of their respective cognitive components, that is, rate of information processing, response caution, and non-decision processes (e.g., stimulus encoding, motor processes). They found that alcohol intoxication causes higher mean RTs and lower response accuracies. The diffusion model decomposition showed that alcohol intoxication caused a decrease in drift rate and an increase in non-decision time. The authors concluded that in a simple perceptual discrimination task, even a moderate dose of alcohol decreased the rate of information processing and negatively affected the non-decision component. However, alcohol consumption left response caution largely intact. (Author/publisher)

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Publication

Library number
20111516 ST [electronic version only]
Source

Psychopharmacology, 2011, August 13; [Epub], DOI: 10.1007/s00213-011-2435-9, 9 p., ref.

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