Attentional orienting towards smoking-related stimuli
Attentional orienting towards smoking-related stimuli
According to incentive salience theory, conditioned stimuli (CS+) associated with drug reinforcement acquire the capacity to elicit a conditioned attentional orienting response, which controls drug-seeking and drug-taking behaviour. We sought evidence for this proposal by measuring visual attentional orienting towards smoking pictures presented briefly in the periphery of the visual field, versus control pictures likewise presented, in smokers versus non-smokers. In each trial, smokers and non-smokers responded manually to a dot probe stimulus that appeared in a location previously occupied by either a smoking picture or a control picture. Attentional bias scores were calculated by subtracting the median reaction time (RT) in the former condition from the median RT in the latter condition. In two experiments, light-smokers (smokers of fewer than 20 cigarettes/day) produced a mean bias score that was significantly greater than that of heavy-smokers (smokers of 20 or more cigarettes/day) and non-smokers. In addition, when smokers from the two experiments were pooled, a significant quadratic relationship was found between cigarettes/day and the attentional bias for the smoking stimuli. These findings are consistent with incentive salience theories and dual-process theories of addiction.
153-160
Hogarth, L.C.
f7a5cd3d-eae4-4856-8840-5892f2f13cbd
Mogg, K.
5f1474af-85f5-4fd3-8eb6-0371be848e30
Bradley, B.P.
bdacaa6c-528b-4086-9448-27ebfe463514
Duka, T.
eda92f29-9587-494a-b5e4-efbc7fd5a5b5
Dickinson, A.
27d44d30-83c3-4cc4-b226-d3865fac682c
2003
Hogarth, L.C.
f7a5cd3d-eae4-4856-8840-5892f2f13cbd
Mogg, K.
5f1474af-85f5-4fd3-8eb6-0371be848e30
Bradley, B.P.
bdacaa6c-528b-4086-9448-27ebfe463514
Duka, T.
eda92f29-9587-494a-b5e4-efbc7fd5a5b5
Dickinson, A.
27d44d30-83c3-4cc4-b226-d3865fac682c
Hogarth, L.C., Mogg, K., Bradley, B.P., Duka, T. and Dickinson, A.
(2003)
Attentional orienting towards smoking-related stimuli.
Behavioural Pharmacology, 160 (2), .
Abstract
According to incentive salience theory, conditioned stimuli (CS+) associated with drug reinforcement acquire the capacity to elicit a conditioned attentional orienting response, which controls drug-seeking and drug-taking behaviour. We sought evidence for this proposal by measuring visual attentional orienting towards smoking pictures presented briefly in the periphery of the visual field, versus control pictures likewise presented, in smokers versus non-smokers. In each trial, smokers and non-smokers responded manually to a dot probe stimulus that appeared in a location previously occupied by either a smoking picture or a control picture. Attentional bias scores were calculated by subtracting the median reaction time (RT) in the former condition from the median RT in the latter condition. In two experiments, light-smokers (smokers of fewer than 20 cigarettes/day) produced a mean bias score that was significantly greater than that of heavy-smokers (smokers of 20 or more cigarettes/day) and non-smokers. In addition, when smokers from the two experiments were pooled, a significant quadratic relationship was found between cigarettes/day and the attentional bias for the smoking stimuli. These findings are consistent with incentive salience theories and dual-process theories of addiction.
This record has no associated files available for download.
More information
Published date: 2003
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 18428
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/18428
ISSN: 0955-8810
PURE UUID: e8ffc2fa-918f-4707-bfdc-bc5d6d6cc901
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 21 Dec 2005
Last modified: 09 Jan 2022 03:05
Export record
Contributors
Author:
L.C. Hogarth
Author:
T. Duka
Author:
A. Dickinson
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics