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Effect or alcohol on a sentence-picture verification task
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Effect or alcohol on a sentence-picture verification task

L.R. Hartley and L. Coxon
Ergonomics, Vol.27(2), pp.195-203
1984
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Abstract

The Clark and Chase (1972) sentence verification task was given to selected volunteers following either a placebo or a dose of alcohol measured to take blood alcohol up to 005mg/100ml. Results showed the alcohol had severe effects on the verbal strategy when employed, but assisted the spatial strategy in verification. The results are contrasted with the effects of noise in the same task and the importance of the results for qualifying the effects of alcohol discussed.

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Source: InCites

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InCites Highlights

These are selected metrics from InCites Benchmarking & Analytics tool, related to this output

Citation topics
1 Clinical & Life Sciences
1.150 Hearing Loss
1.150.1538 Noise Pollution
Web Of Science research areas
Engineering, Industrial
Ergonomics
Psychology
Psychology, Applied
ESI research areas
Engineering
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