Selective processing of cannabis cues in regular cannabis users.
Selective processing of cannabis cues in regular cannabis users.
Recent studies indicate that the regular use of certain drugs, such as tobacco and alcohol, is associated with biases in the processing of drug-related cues, as those cues grab attention, elicit approach and are perceived as pleasant. This study investigated whether regular cannabis users exhibit comparable cognitive biases for cannabis-related pictorial cues. Twenty-three regular cannabis users and 23 non-user controls completed a series of tasks including a visual probe task with concurrent eye movement monitoring (to measure attentional bias), a stimulus-response compatibility task (to measure implicit approach bias) and a valence rating task (to measure the perceived pleasantness of cannabis cues). Results indicated that, relative to non-users, regular cannabis users had biases to maintain their gaze on cannabis cues, to make faster approach responses towards cannabis cues, and to rate cannabis cues as pleasant. Results are generally consistent with previous findings from tobacco smokers and heavy drinkers, and the implications for incentive-motivational theories of addiction are discussed.
cannabis, marijuana, attentional bias, implicit approach, craving, dependence
75-82
Field, Matt
3d351fd0-5796-40b5-a1ff-3f1b0fca3889
Eastwood, Brian
ddd2a4f3-c056-4254-90b7-365f0a6e054c
Bradley, Brendan P.
bdacaa6c-528b-4086-9448-27ebfe463514
Mogg, Karin
5f1474af-85f5-4fd3-8eb6-0371be848e30
2006
Field, Matt
3d351fd0-5796-40b5-a1ff-3f1b0fca3889
Eastwood, Brian
ddd2a4f3-c056-4254-90b7-365f0a6e054c
Bradley, Brendan P.
bdacaa6c-528b-4086-9448-27ebfe463514
Mogg, Karin
5f1474af-85f5-4fd3-8eb6-0371be848e30
Field, Matt, Eastwood, Brian, Bradley, Brendan P. and Mogg, Karin
(2006)
Selective processing of cannabis cues in regular cannabis users.
Drug and Alcohol Dependence, 85, .
(doi:10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2006.03.018).
Abstract
Recent studies indicate that the regular use of certain drugs, such as tobacco and alcohol, is associated with biases in the processing of drug-related cues, as those cues grab attention, elicit approach and are perceived as pleasant. This study investigated whether regular cannabis users exhibit comparable cognitive biases for cannabis-related pictorial cues. Twenty-three regular cannabis users and 23 non-user controls completed a series of tasks including a visual probe task with concurrent eye movement monitoring (to measure attentional bias), a stimulus-response compatibility task (to measure implicit approach bias) and a valence rating task (to measure the perceived pleasantness of cannabis cues). Results indicated that, relative to non-users, regular cannabis users had biases to maintain their gaze on cannabis cues, to make faster approach responses towards cannabis cues, and to rate cannabis cues as pleasant. Results are generally consistent with previous findings from tobacco smokers and heavy drinkers, and the implications for incentive-motivational theories of addiction are discussed.
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Published date: 2006
Keywords:
cannabis, marijuana, attentional bias, implicit approach, craving, dependence
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Local EPrints ID: 40422
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/40422
ISSN: 0376-8716
PURE UUID: 0626ea89-e5b8-4a83-83be-9689cde576a2
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Date deposited: 03 Jul 2006
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:19
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Author:
Matt Field
Author:
Brian Eastwood
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