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Low doses of alcohol have a selective effect on the recognition of happy facial expressions

✍ Scribed by Michiko Kano; Jiro Gyoba; Miyuki Kamachi; Hideki Mochizuki; Michio Hongo; Kazuhiko Yanai


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2003
Tongue
English
Weight
113 KB
Volume
18
Category
Article
ISSN
0885-6222

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Alcohol is one of the most widely used recreational drugs, yet it is associated with undesirable social behaviour. It is used primarily for its psychoactive properties, increasing sociability and talkativeness. We hypothesize that low doses of alcohol can improve the performance related to positive emotional cognition. In this experiment, we examined the effect of low doses of alcohol on the processing of emotional facial expressions. Fifteen young male volunteers drank alcohol at volumes of 30, 60, 120 ml (0.14, 0.28, 0.56 g/kg) and performed discrimination tasks on morphed facial emotion expressions of anger, happiness, sadness and surprise‐neutral. One‐way ANOVA co‐varying pretreatment performances revealed significant differences between alcohol levels in happy face discrimination ( p<0.01). Bonferroni correction demonstrated that low doses of alcohol caused a significantly better discrimination of happy faces, and that the performances were worse with higher doses ( p<0.001). No significance was observed with the other three emotional faces. These results indicate that low doses of alcohol affect positive emotional cognition of happy facial expressions. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.