Smoking of tobacco is predicted to cause approximately six million deaths
worldwide in 2014. Responding effectively to this epidemic requires a thorough
understanding of how smoking behaviour is transmitted and modified. Here, we
present a new mathematical model of the social dynamics that cause cigarette
smoking to spread in a population. Our model predicts that more individualistic
societies will show faster adoption and cessation of smoking. Evidence from a
new century-long composite data set on smoking prevalence in 25 countries
supports the model, with direct implications for public health interventions
around the world. Our results suggest that differences in culture between
societies can measurably affect the temporal dynamics of a social spreading
process, and that these effects can be understood via a quantitative
mathematical model matched to observations