3/ If someone is recovering from an alcohol addiction, it probably makes no difference whether what they drink is 0% or 0.5%. It's sensory cues - not a tiny amount of alcohol - that could cause them to relapse. This is highlighted in this study: https://
Dr Rebecca Monk, Dr Adam Qureshi and Prof Derek Heim investigate alcohol cues on inhibitory control https://t.co/Obi1Wms3u9
“Smells like inhibition: The effects of olfactory and visual alcohol cues on inhibitory control” https://t.co/ql8sCJrVmO
RT @pbm_ab: The effects of olfactory and visual alcohol cues on inhibitory control, new paper by @DrRebeccaMonk @heim_derek https://t.co/DJ…
The effects of olfactory and visual alcohol cues on inhibitory control, new paper by @DrRebeccaMonk @heim_derek https://t.co/DJyuo8YEqB
RT @HealthyFellow: Interesting! Full text here: https://t.co/AoxwERQWIZ #alcohol #health #wine https://t.co/LGDAtlqvEe
Interesting! Full text here: https://t.co/AoxwERQWIZ #alcohol #health #wine https://t.co/LGDAtlqvEe
Smells like inhibition: The effects of olfactory and visual alcohol cues on inhibitory control https://t.co/imPNVDNdK8
The smell of alcohol may make it difficult to resit https://t.co/0aBdlVcUDY
go/no-goでアルコール関連の視覚手がかりはfalse alarm率の低下を引き起こし、反応も遅くなるが、正確性は高まる。アルコールのにおいはFalse alarmを高める。Smells like inhibition: https://t.co/9U3WqTxlce