Retraining automatic action-tendencies to approach alcohol in hazardous drinkers.

@article{Wiers2010RetrainingAA,
  title={Retraining automatic action-tendencies to approach alcohol in hazardous drinkers.},
  author={Reinout W. Wiers and Mike Rinck and Robert Kordts and Katrijn Houben and Fritz Strack},
  journal={Addiction},
  year={2010},
  volume={105 2},
  pages={
          279-87
        }
}
AIMS The main aim of this study was to test whether automatic action-tendencies to approach alcohol can be modified, and whether this affects drinking behaviour. DESIGN AND PARTICIPANTS Forty-two hazardous drinkers were assigned randomly to a condition in which they were implicitly trained to avoid or to approach alcohol, using a training variety of the alcohol Approach Avoidance Test (AAT). Participants pushed or pulled a joystick in response to picture-format (landscape or portrait). The… 
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The results indicate that the virtual reality training to avoid alcohol- related stimuli or environments might reduce automatic action tendencies toward alcohol, while simply being exposed to alcohol-related stimuli or environment might increase craving for alcohol in the sham training group.
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Training people to respond to alcohol images by making avoidance joystick movements can affect subsequent alcohol consumption, and has shown initial efficacy as a treatment adjunct. However, the
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Although alcohol-dependent patients and matched controls did not differ on automatic approach and avoidance tendencies eliciting by alcohol-related cues, individual differences in the quantity of alcohol consumed before entering treatment were associated with the strength of automatic approach tendencies elicited by alcohol cues.
UvA-DARE (Digital Academic Repository) Retraining automatic action tendencies changes alcoholic patients’ approach bias for alcohol and improves treatment outcome Wiers,
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It is indicated that a short intervention can change alcoholics’ automatic approach bias for alcohol and may improve treatment outcome.
A Test of Multisession Automatic Action Tendency Retraining to Reduce Alcohol Consumption Among Young Adults in the Context of a Human Laboratory Paradigm
TLDR
Automatic action tendency retraining was ineffective among heavy drinking young adults without motivation to change their drinking and the impaired control laboratory paradigm is a valid laboratory-based measure of young adult alcohol consumption that provides the opportunity to observe drinking topography and self-administration of nonalcoholic beverages.
The image-based alcohol-action implicit association test.
Implicit Alcohol Approach and Avoidance Tendencies Predict Future Drinking in Problem Drinkers.
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Given that many explicit measures typically used in treatment studies fail to predict who will change, approach and avoidance tendencies are promising candidates to understand individual differences in treatment responses.
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