Montgomery, C, Fisk, John ORCID: 0000-0002-2981-0870, Murphy, P N, Ryland, I and Hilton, J (2012) The effects of heavy social drinking on executive function: a systematic review and meta-analytic study of existing literature and new empirical findings. Human Psychopharmacology: Clinical and Experimental, 27 (2). pp. 187-199. ISSN 0885-6222
PDF (Publishers post-print for classroom teaching and internal training purposes at UCLan)
- Published Version
Restricted to Registered users only 296kB |
Official URL: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/hup.126...
Abstract
Keywords:
alcohol use;
executive function;
social drinking
Background
Previous investigations of executive function in alcohol dependent and in social drinkers have not always produced consistent results and have not utilised key indicators of recent theoretical models of Executive Function (EF). The present paper reports the results of two studies that seek to address these limitations.
Method
Study 1 took the form of a systematic review and meta-analysis of studies examining EF in social drinkers. In Study 2, 41 participants completed an alcohol use inventory and were assigned to either light or heavy alcohol use via median split of average weekly dose. Participants completed measures of the fractionated executive processes of updating, shifting, inhibition and access to semantic memory.
Results
Study 1 only identified seven studies of EF in social drinkers, and the mean effect size was non-significant. In study 2, the heavy alcohol use group performed worse on all measures of executive functioning except memory updating.
Conclusions
To our knowledge, this is the first systematic investigation of executive functioning in social drinkers. Given that the participants were non-treatment seeking social drinking students, the EF deficit in the heavy user group is particularly worrying and could increase the likelihood of developing an alcohol use disorder.
Repository Staff Only: item control page