13 research outputs found

    Exposure to negative affect cues and urge to smoke

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    While much of the cue exposure literature for cigarette smoking has focused on external cues, little has been done in the area of exposing participants to internal cues, such as negative affect (NA), despite the important role of such cues in maintaining smoking behavior. Smokers were exposed to an NA mood induction to induce an urge to smoke and then exposed to NA cues over several trials in an attempt to decrease this urge. Participants (N = 32) were undergraduate smokers assigned to either the exposure or control group for the mood induction procedure, which occurred over 8 trials. All participants viewed NA images and listened to NA music at Trial 1. The exposure group continued to view NA images and listened to NA music, and the control group viewed neutral images and listened to neutral music for 6 subsequent trials lasting about 5 min each. Both groups were exposed to NA images and NA music at Trial 8. NA and urge to smoke ratings were assessed at the end of each trial; heart rate was measured continuously. Results indicated that the mood induction procedure induced NA and urge to smoke, but the extinction procedure did not decrease urge over trials. Heart rate data were not associated with self-report data. In conclusion, the mood induction procedure in the present study appears to be an efficient way to induce urge to smoke. However, further research is necessary to determine why urge to smoke seems to be resistant to extinction

    The relationship between smoking motives and smoking urges experienced in response to a negative affect induction

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    INTRODUCTION: The present study attempted to further elucidate the relationship between self-reported smoking motives and affect in college students. METHOD: Smoking motives were measured via self-report, and following a laboratory negative affect (NA) mood induction, urge to smoke was assessed via three questions. Participants were college students (N=84) who reported smoking an average of 8.74 (SD=5.36) cigarettes per day. RESULTS: Results indicated that smoking motives for Positive Reinforcement and Automaticity significantly predicted participants\u27 responses on two measures of urge to smoke immediately following the NA induction. Positive Reinforcement motives were predictive of urge to smoke, and Automaticity motives were predictive of the number of cigarettes participants stated that they would smoke if cigarettes were provided for free. CONCLUSIONS: These findings indicate that (1) the association between NA and smoking is perhaps more complex than previously thought; and (2) merely two (Positive Reinforcement, Automaticity) of possibly thirteen smoking motives were identified as predictive of smoking urges. It is particularly surprising that other smoking motives (e.g., Negative Reinforcement) were not significant predictors of urge following the NA induction. Implications for relapse risk and treatment considerations among smokers experiencing elevated NA are considered

    The relationship between depression level and smoking motives in college smokers

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    While the link between cigarette smoking and depression symptomatology has been well established, more research is needed to determine how smoking motives are related to depression levels in smokers. Specifically, smoking motives related to the friendship-like attachment to smoking (i.e., affiliative attachment) may play an important role in individuals reporting depressive symptomatology. The present study examined the relationship between three smoking motives and depression levels in a sample of 79 mildly nicotine-dependent, college student cigarette smokers. A hierarchical multiple regression analysis was conducted with depression as the dependent variable and gender and cigarettes per day as the independent variables (Step 1), positive and negative reinforcement motives (Step 2), and affiliative attachment motives (Step 3). Results of regression analyses indicated that affiliative attachment motives explained significant variance in participant depression level above and beyond that explained by positive and negative reinforcement motives. These findings suggest that smokers with elevated depression should be assessed for social functioning and affiliative attachment smoking motives, and future research should be conducted to determine if individuals with high levels of affiliative attachment may benefit from smoking cessation treatment programs with an enhanced social support component

    High-resolution behavioral economic analysis of cigarette demand to inform tax policy

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    Aims: Novel methods in behavioral economics permit the systematic assessment of the relationship between cigarette consumption and price. Towards informing tax policy, the goals of this study were to conduct a high-resolution analysis of cigarette demand in a large sample of adult smokers and to use the data to estimate the effects of tax increases in 10 US States. Design: In-person descriptive survey assessment. Setting: Academic departments at three universities. Participants: Adult daily smokers (i.e. more than five cigarettes/day; 18+ years old; ≥8th grade education); n=1056. Measurements: Estimated cigarette demand, demographics, expired carbon monoxide. Findings: The cigarette demand curve exhibited highly variable levels of price sensitivity, especially in the form of \u27left-digit effects\u27 (i.e. very high price sensitivity as pack prices transitioned from one whole number to the next; e.g. 5.80−6/pack).A5.80-6/pack). A 1 tax increase in the 10 states was projected to reduce the economic burden of smoking by an average of 530.6million(range:530.6million (range: 93.6-976.5 million) and increase gross tax revenue by an average of 162% (range: 114-247%). Conclusions: Tobacco price sensitivity is non-linear across the demand curve and in particular for pack-level left-digit price transitions. Tax increases in US states with similar price and tax rates to the sample are projected to result in substantial decreases in smoking-related costs and substantial increases in tax revenues. © 2012 The Authors, Addiction © 2012 Society for the Study of Addiction

    Delivery Mode Affects Stability of Early Infant Gut Microbiota

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    © 2020 The Author(s) Mitchell et al. compare early-life infant gut microbiota by delivery mode, suggesting early colonization by Bacteroides regardless of delivery mode, but loss of Bacteroides by 2 weeks in C-section-delivered infants, whether or not exposed to the vagina in labor. Infant strains matched maternal rectal rather vaginal strains
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