AI Article Synopsis

  • Smokers typically have positive reactions to smoking cues, and previous studies show mixed results on whether these cues are physiologically appetitive.
  • The current study aimed to explore how the motivation to quit smoking influences how individuals respond to smoking cues.
  • Results indicated that participants generally had reduced startle responses to smoking pictures, with precontemplators showing stronger reactions compared to contemplators, suggesting that motivation to quit may diminish the appeal of smoking cues.

Article Abstract

Rationale: Smokers report pleasant reactions to viewing cigarettes, suggesting that smoking cues may be appetitive in nature. Two studies have investigated this hypothesis through physiological assessment. The first study found that smoking cues were physiologically appetitive in nature, with dampened startle response to smoking pictures in comparison to neutral pictures. The second found that smoking pictures did not modulate the startle response, suggesting such cues may not be physiologically appetitive.

Objective: The goal of the present study was to further investigate how participants' motivation to quit smoking might modulate responses to smoking cues.

Materials And Methods: Twenty-two nicotine-dependent smokers viewed standardized pleasant, unpleasant, neutral, and smoking pictures. Eleven of the subjects reported no intent to quit (precontemplators) and 11 reported planning to quit within the next 6 months (contemplators). Acoustic startle probes were randomly administered while subjects viewed the pictures, and eyeblink startle magnitude was measured with electromyography (EMG).

Results: As a whole, participants exhibited dampened startle responses during smoking pictures, relative to unpleasant pictures. Precontemplators showed robust startle inhibition to smoking pictures, in comparison to both neutral and unpleasant pictures. Contemplators, however, showed blunted unpleasant picture augmentation and a lack of startle inhibition for pleasant pictures.

Conclusion: These findings are consistent with the idea that smoking pictures are appetitive in nature. Furthermore, they suggest that smokers at a later stage of change may exhibit a lesser response.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00213-007-0839-3DOI Listing

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