Nieske van Woerden’s research while affiliated with Maastricht University and other places

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Publications (2)


Implicit and Explicit Alcohol-Related Cognitions in Heavy and Light Drinkers
  • Article
  • Publisher preview available

November 2002

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3 Reads

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224 Citations

Journal of Abnormal Psychology

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Nieske van Woerden

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Implicit and explicit alcohol-related cognitions were measured in 2 dimensions: positive-negative (valence) and arousal-sedation, with 2 versions of the Implicit Association Test (IAT; A. G. Greenwald, D. E. McGhee, & J. L. Schwartz) and related explicit measures. Heavy drinkers (n = 24) strongly associated alcohol with arousal on the arousal IAT (especially men) and scored higher on explicit arousal expectancies than light drinkers (n = 24). On the valence IAT, both light and heavy drinkers showed strong negative implicit associations with alcohol that contrasted with their positive explicit judgments (heavy drinkers were more positive). Implicit and explicit cognitions uniquely contributed to the prediction of 1-month prospective drinking. Heavy drinkers' implicit arousal associations could reflect the sensitized psychomotor-activating response to drug cues, a motivational mechanism hypothesized to underlie the etiology of addictive behaviors.

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Figure 1. Mean Implicit Association Test (IAT) effects for the valence IAT and the arousal IAT, with standard errors of the means. The difference scores (in reaction times [RT]) were calculated to be in the same direction for the CR phase of the valence IAT and the RC phase of the arousal IAT. A positive value for the valence IAT indicates a negative implicit association with alcohol; a positive value on the arousal IAT indicates an implicit alcohol-arousal association. 
Implicit and Explicit Alcohol-Related Cognitions in Heavy and Light Drinkers

November 2002

·

529 Reads

·

380 Citations

Journal of Abnormal Psychology

Implicit and explicit alcohol-related cognitions were measured in 2 dimensions: positive-negative (valence) and arousal-sedation, with 2 versions of the Implicit Association Test (IAT; A. G. Greenwald, D. E. McGhee, & J. L. Schwartz) and related explicit measures. Heavy drinkers (n = 24) strongly associated alcohol with arousal on the arousal IAT (especially men) and scored higher on explicit arousal expectancies than light drinkers (n = 24). On the valence IAT, both light and heavy drinkers showed strong negative implicit associations with alcohol that contrasted with their positive explicit judgments (heavy drinkers were more positive). Implicit and explicit cognitions uniquely contributed to the prediction of 1-month prospective drinking. Heavy drinkers' implicit arousal associations could reflect the sensitized psychomotor-activating response to drug cues, a motivational mechanism hypothesized to underlie the etiology of addictive behaviors.

Citations (2)


... The modification of attribute stimuli in concept mapping trials of the IAT renders its versatility in measuring different types of automatic associations. Beyond its original use for evaluating implicit affective biases (Greenwald et al., 1998), the IAT has been adapted to measure implicit associations related to identity, arousal-sedate status, and approachavoidance tendencies (Lindgren et al., 2015;Palfai & Ostafin, 2003;Wiers et al., 2002). In PA research, studies have predominantly employed the IAT to assess implicit attitude towards PA and/or sedentary behaviors (Zenko & Ekkekakis, 2019). ...

Reference:

Psychometric evaluation of Liking and Wanting implicit association tests for physical activity and recreational screen use
Implicit and Explicit Alcohol-Related Cognitions in Heavy and Light Drinkers

Journal of Abnormal Psychology

... However, previous research has shown relationships between what the IAT measures and self-reported behavior related to alcohol use. Risky drinking is associated with stronger associations between alcohol and approach (Palfai and Ostafin 2003;Ostafin and Palfai 2006) and weaker associations between alcohol and negative concepts (Wiers et al. 2002;Houben et al. 2009Houben et al. , 2010. Individual differences between IAT measures and attentional bias have been found, stronger alcohol-negative associations being associated with attentional avoidance of alcohol stimuli (Gladwin and Vink 2018). ...

Implicit and Explicit Alcohol-Related Cognitions in Heavy and Light Drinkers

Journal of Abnormal Psychology