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About
Background:
Alcohol-dependence is a chronic disease with a high risk of relapse. The main therapeutic outcome relies on relapse prevention which seeks to identify high risk situations and individual's response to these situations especially the emotional response to social environment. Alcohol-dependence also induces cognitive impairments leading to social cognition impairments increasing the risk of relapse.
Familiarity is a key process in social interactions: it induces the feeling of prior knowledge of a stimulus without remembering consciously its identity. Followed by a second process based on the contribution of contextual information (recollection) familiarity allows face recognition.
Main aim:
Study of familiarity for faces in alcohol-dependence
Secondary objectives:
Highlighting correlations between familiarity impairments and clinical outcomes
Full description
Familiarity will be tested by a specific familiarity task using an original paradigm. This paradigm allows the analysis of familiarity as a quantitative process as well as the analysis of personal familiarity to each subject. Three familiar and three unfamiliar faces are morphed in pairs for each participant. The displayed stimuli for each pair of faces are ten morphs with 5 to 95% of familiar face increasing by 10%. Participants are asked to press a button if the displayed stimulus seems familiar. At the end of the task each participant is asked to name the identity of the familiar faces (true or false recognitions, true or false omissions).
Each participant will undergo 2 visits.
First visit:
Second visit:
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Inclusion criteria
For all participants:
For alcohol-dependent patients:
For control subjects:
Exclusion criteria
For all participants:
For alcohol-dependent patients:
42 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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