1. Retention of orienting reaction habituation in chronic alcoholics.
- Author
-
Rogozea R and Florea-Ciocoiu V
- Subjects
- Adult, Alcohol Drinking physiology, Alcoholic Intoxication physiopathology, Alcoholism rehabilitation, Cerebral Cortex physiopathology, Evoked Potentials, Auditory physiology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Reaction Time physiology, Alcoholism physiopathology, Arousal physiology, Electroencephalography, Memory physiology, Orientation physiology, Retention, Psychology physiology, Substance-Related Disorders physiopathology
- Abstract
A polygraphic study on resistance to habituation of the somatic (EMG), autonomic (finger plethysmogram, galvanic skin reaction, respiration) and EEG (acoustic-evoked potential and EEG-blocking reaction) components of the orienting reaction, elicited by a repetitive auditory stimulus during successive (weekly) sessions was performed in 67 chronic alcoholics and in 70 matched normal subjects (control group). The study showed significant retention disturbances of orienting reaction habituation (i.e., of learning), or the "saving" of stimulations, achieved from one session to the other to obtain the habituation criterion, the savings being less in alcoholics than in control subjects. The severity of habituation retention disturbances depended on patients' ages, types of alcoholism, alcohol consumption intensity and chronicity, as well as the type of resting EEG.
- Published
- 1990
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