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Journal Article

Citation

Flowe HD, Colloff MF, Karoğlu N, Zelek K, Ryder H, Humphries JE, Takarangi MKT. Appl. Cogn. Psychol. 2017; 31(4): 379-391.

Affiliation

School of PsychologyFlinders UniversityAdelaideAustralia.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1002/acp.3332

PMID

28781426

PMCID

PMC5519942

Abstract

Acute alcohol intoxication during encoding can impair subsequent identification accuracy, but results across studies have been inconsistent, with studies often finding no effect. Little is also known about how alcohol intoxication affects the identification confidence-accuracy relationship. We randomly assigned women (N = 153) to consume alcohol (dosed to achieve a 0.08% blood alcohol content) or tonic water, controlling for alcohol expectancy. Women then participated in an interactive hypothetical sexual assault scenario and, 24 hours or 7 days later, attempted to identify the assailant from a perpetrator present or a perpetrator absent simultaneous line-up and reported their decision confidence. Overall, levels of identification accuracy were similar across the alcohol and tonic water groups. However, women who had consumed tonic water as opposed to alcohol identified the assailant with higher confidence on average. Further, calibration analyses suggested that confidence is predictive of accuracy regardless of alcohol consumption. The theoretical and applied implications of our results are discussed.

© 2017 The Authors Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.


Language: en

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