Literature DB >> 32151879

Redundant visual signals reduce the intensity of alcohol impairment.

Alexandra R D'Agostino1, Jaime Brown1, Mark T Fillmore2.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Humans interact with multiple stimuli across several modalities each day. The "redundant signal effect" refers to the observation that individuals respond more quickly to stimuli when information is presented as multisensory, redundant stimuli (e.g., aurally and visually), rather than as a single stimulus presented to either modality alone. Studies of alcohol effects on human performance show that alcohol induced impairment is reduced when subjects respond to redundant multisensory stimuli. However, redundant signals do not need to involve multisensory stimuli to facilitate behavior as studies have shown facilitating effects by redundant unisensory signals that are delivered to the "same sensory" (e.g., two visual or two auditory signals).
METHODS: The current study examined the degree to which redundant visual signals would reduce alcohol impairment and compared the magnitude of this effect with that produced by redundant multisensory signals. On repeated test sessions, participants (n = 20) received placebo or 0.65 g/kg alcohol and performed a two-choice reaction time task that measured how quickly participants responded to four different signal conditions. The four conditions differed by the modality of the target presentation: visual, auditory, multisensory, and unisensory.
RESULTS: Alcohol slowed performance in all conditions and reaction times were generally faster in the redundant signal conditions. Both multisensory and unisensory redundant signals reduced the impairing effects of alcohol compared with single signals.
CONCLUSIONS: These findings indicate that the ability of redundant signals to counteract alcohol impairment does not require multisensory input. Duplicate signals to the same modality can also reduce alcohol impairment.
Copyright © 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Alcohol; Reaction time; Redundant signal effect; Unisensory

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32151879      PMCID: PMC7127954          DOI: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2020.107945

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Drug Alcohol Depend        ISSN: 0376-8716            Impact factor:   4.492


  27 in total

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9.  Simulated driving performance of adults with ADHD: comparisons with alcohol intoxication.

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10.  The differing impact of multisensory and unisensory integration on behavior.

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