Psychological Assessment, Vol 38(3), Mar 2026, 203-219; doi:10.1037/pas0001434
Alcohol demand, reflecting the relative reinforcing value of alcohol, is robustly associated with alcohol use and problems. Alcohol demand is typically assessed using alcohol purchase tasks (APTs) in which participants estimate alcohol consumption at escalating prices, with the resulting demand curves yielding multiple indices of value. Although generally efficient, full-length APTs pose some burden and existing short forms cannot produce individual demand curves or derived indices. Thus, we developed a brief adjusting APT using an algorithm to identify 5–6 items from a full-length APT based on an individual’s level of alcohol demand. Two independent samples of heavy-drinking young adults (Sample 1: N = 725, Mage = 21.43 years; Sample 2: N = 588, Mage = 22.64 years) completed an assessment that included a full-length APT and measures of alcohol use and problems. Using a binary-search-style algorithm, brief APT responses were extracted from the full-length APT. In each sample, individual demand curves from the brief APT fit the data well. Observed (intensity, Omax, breakpoint) and derived (elasticity) demand indices robustly corresponded with the full-length APT, including similar mean estimates and high correlations (r ≥ 0.79) between corresponding indices from the brief and full-length APTs. Demand indices from the brief APT were associated with alcohol use and problems, and associations of corresponding indices from the brief and full-length APTs with alcohol use outcomes were of equivalent magnitude. These findings provide initial support for a brief adjusting APT as a measure of alcohol demand. Future research should further evaluate this measure, including stand-alone administration and detection of within-person changes in alcohol demand. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2026 APA, all rights reserved)