New research from Western University's Brain and Mind Institute (BMI) has revealed that alcohol definitively impairs the human ability to override impulse or snap decisions that are natural responses to rapidly evolving situations.
Researchers investigated the age-old question of whether alcohol impairs decision making by asking participants to point toward suddenly appearing visual targets when sober and again, after consuming enough alcohol to raise their blood levels to the legal limit for driving.
The target predominantly remained stationary, but sometimes it abruptly jumped to a new location.
Participants in this study generated similar results both sober and after a few drinks but that all changed dramatically when participants were asked to simply stop their movements when the target jumped.
After drinking, participants were often unable to stop and instead corrected for the target jumps, implying that drinking alcohol had impaired their ability to switch off their autopilot.
"This study shows that although behaviour that's well practised or automatic is pretty robust to the effects of moderate amounts of alcohol, things really fall apart when you have to override these responses and do something different," Kevin Johnston, the lead author of the study said.
The study was published in the journal PLOS ONE.
