Acute alcohol impairs human goal-directed action |
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Authors: | Hogarth Lee Attwood Angela S Bate Helen A Munafò Marcus R |
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Affiliation: | School of Psychology, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia. l.hogarth@unsw.edu.au |
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Abstract: | There are two forms of motivated behaviour. Goal-directed action is mediated by knowledge of the consequences whereas habitual action is elicited directly by stimuli associated with the action. Alcohol may impair goal-directed control, favouring habit. To evaluate this proposal, participants were administered with 0.4 g/kg of alcohol or placebo before acquiring separate instrumental responses for chocolate and water points. Chocolate was then fed to satiety to devalue this outcome before choice between the two responses was tested in extinction. Any reduction in chocolate choice must be mediated by knowledge of the current incentive value of this outcome, i.e. must be goal-directed. Alcohol attenuated the devaluation effect on choice in extinction, but had no effect on reacquisition performance, the hedonic appraisal of rewards or acquisition of the instrumental contingencies. Acute alcohol impaired goal-directed control of action selection, favouring habit, which may mediate alcohol effects on under-controlled behaviour more broadly. |
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Keywords: | Alcohol Goal-directed action Habit Human Addiction Learning |
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