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Journal Article

Citation

Starkey NJ, Charlton SG. Hum. Psychopharmacol. 2014; 29(4): 370-383.

Affiliation

Traffic and Road Safety Research Group (TARS), School of Psychology, The University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1002/hup.2415

PMID

24930981

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Alcohol has an adverse effect on driving performance; however, the effects of moderate doses on different aspects of the driving task are inconsistent and differ across the intoxication curve. This research aimed to investigate driving and cognitive performance asymmetries (acute tolerance and acute protracted error) accompanying the onset and recovery from moderate alcohol consumption.

METHODS: Sixty-one participants received a placebo, medium (target blood alcohol concentration [BAC] 0.05 mg/ml) or high (target BAC 0.08 mg/ml) dose of alcohol. Participants completed a simulated drive, cognitive tests and subjective rating scales five times over a 3.5 h period.

RESULTS: When ascending and descending BACs (0.05 and 0.09 mg/ml) were compared participants' self-ratings of intoxication and willingness to drive showed acute tolerance. Acute protracted errors were observed for response speed, maze learning errors, time exceeding the speed limit and exaggerated steering responses to hazards.

CONCLUSIONS: Participants' estimates of their level of intoxication were poorly related to their actual BAC levels (and hence degree of impairment), and various aspects of driving and cognitive performance worsened during descending BACs. This indicates that drivers are not good at judging their fitness to drive after drinking only moderate amounts of alcohol and suggests an important focus for public education regarding alcohol and driving. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.


Language: en

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