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Journal Article

Citation

Nicholson ME, Andre JT, Tyrrell RA, Wang M, Leibowitz HW. J. Stud. Alcohol 1995; 56(3): 261-266.

Affiliation

Department of Health Education, Pennsylvania State University, University Park 16802, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1995, Rutgers Center of Alcohol Studies)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

7623462

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Contrast sensitivity involves distinguishing threshold luminance differences and is usually assessed using static sine-wave gratings over a range of different spatial frequencies. The purpose of this study was to determine the effects of various levels of acute alcohol intoxication on contrast sensitivity to stationary and moving sine-wave gratings. Moving gratings required the subjects to make pursuit eye movements. A secondary goal was to investigate whether any alcohol-related effects were associated with any measures of intoxication. METHOD: Male volunteers (N = 8) participated in three counterbalanced, double-blind, testing sessions (low alcohol, moderate alcohol and placebo) plus a control session with no beverage. Breath alcohol concentration and two subjective measures of intoxication were measured for each subject. Static and dynamic contrast sensitivity were determined for electronically generated sine-wave gratings that were either stationary or traveled in a circular path with a diameter of 9 cm (3.7 degrees) at 51.7 rpm, thus requiring the subject to make smooth pursuit eye movements. RESULTS: The mean blood alcohol concentration measured in the moderate alcohol condition was 0.043% and in the low alcohol condition 0.011%. Moderate dose alcohol consumption significantly impaired both static and dynamic contrast with a greater effect for moving targets. CONCLUSIONS: Objective and subjective measures of intoxication were unrelated to the alcohol-related losses in contrast sensitivity. Although most states currently prohibit driving with BACs of 0.08-0.10%, the present data indicate reliable visual impairment at approximately half of that level (.44%).


Language: en

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