Current forms of inhibitory training produce no greater reduction in drinking than simple assessment: A preliminary study

Janette L. Smith*, Nicole J. Dash, Stuart J. Johnstone, Katrijn Houben, Matt Field

*Corresponding author for this work

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Abstract

Background: Disinhibition is apparent in users of many substances, including heavy drinkers. Previous research has shown that brief training to improve inhibitory control is associated with reduced alcohol consumption. We investigated whether a new form of inhibitory training would produce greater reductions, relative to a carefully designed control condition and a proven method of reducing consumption, the Brief Alcohol Intervention (BAI). Methods: One hundred and fourteen regular drinkers were assigned randomly to one of five training conditions: Control (no inhibitory training); Beer-NoGo (inhibit responses linked to task-irrelevant pictures of beer); Restrained-Stop (requiring more urgent inhibition but without pictures of beer); Combined (a previously untested form of training requiring urgent inhibition to pictures of beer): or BAI. The outcome measures were alcohol consumption in the week before and after training, and in a bogus taste test administered immediately post-training. Results: Participation in the study, regardless of condition, was associated with reductions in weekly consumption. However, only the BAI produced a greater reduction relative to the Control condition. The training tasks were not associated with reductions in taste test consumption. Conclusions: Although concerns about low power limit confidence, the current study suggests that three forms of inhibitory training do not have a substantial effect on drinking beyond the effect of simple assessment, in comparison to a control task which does not promote impulsive responding. Future research needs to establish a training protocol that produces greater reductions in consumption not only relative to the effect of assessment but also relative to a BAI.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)47-58
JournalDrug and Alcohol Dependence
Volume173
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Apr 2017

Keywords

  • Alcohol
  • Inhibitory control training
  • Go/NoGo
  • Stop-Signal
  • Assessment
  • Hawthorne effect

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