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Behavioral economic and value-based decision-making constructs that discriminate current heavy drinkers versus people who reduced their drinking without treatment.

Amber Copeland, Tom Stafford, Samuel F. Acuff, James G. Murphy, Matt Field

2022Psychology of Addictive Behaviors17 citationsDOI

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: A substantial number of people reduce their consumption of alcohol in the absence of formal treatment; however, less is known about the mechanisms of change. The aim of this study is to explore whether constructs derived from behavioral economics and computational decision-modeling characterize the moderation of alcohol consumption that many heavy drinkers experience without treatment. METHOD: = 60) were recruited. Participants completed self-report behavioral economic measures (alcohol demand and alcohol-related and alcohol-free reinforcement) and a two-alternative forced choice task in which they chose between two alcoholic (in one block) or two soft drink images (in a different block). A drift-diffusion model was fitted to responses from this task to yield the underlying parameters of value-based choice. RESULTS: = .75). However, contrary to hypotheses, there were no robust between-group differences in value-based decision-making (VBDM) parameters. CONCLUSIONS: Self-report behavioral economic measures demonstrate that alcohol moderation without treatment is characterized by lowered alcohol demand and greater behavioral allocation to alcohol-free reinforcement, in line with behavioral economic theory. However, a computerized VBDM measure yielded inconclusive findings. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).

Topics & Concepts

ModerationPsychologyPsycINFOBehavioral economicsReinforcementAlcoholSocial psychologyPoison controlClinical psychologyEnvironmental healthMedicineMEDLINEEconomicsFinanceChemistryBiochemistryLawPolitical scienceSubstance Abuse Treatment and OutcomesBehavioral Health and InterventionsWine Industry and Tourism