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Cue-Induced smoking urges deplete cigarette smokers' self-control resources
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Cue-Induced smoking urges deplete cigarette smokers' self-control resources

M. S. Hagger, E. Leaver, K. Esser, C-M Leung, N. T. Pas, D. A. Keatley, D. K. C. Chan and N. L. D. Chatzisarantis
Annals of behavioral medicine, Vol.46(3), pp.394-400
2013
PMID: 23720186

Abstract

Psychology Psychology, Multidisciplinary Social Sciences
Exposure to smoking-related cues leads to increased urge to smoke in regular cigarette smokers and resisting these urges requires considerable self-control. Adopting a resource depletion model, two studies tested the hypothesis that resisting smoking urges depletes self-control resources. Adopting a within-participants randomized cross-over design, participants (study 1, N = 19; study 2, N = 32) were exposed to smoking-related (study 1: smoking images; study 2: cigarette cue-exposure task) and neutral (study 1: neutral images; study 2: drinking-straw task) cues with presentation order randomized. After each cue set, participants completed self-control tasks (study 1: handgrip task; study 2: handgrip and Stroop tasks), performance on which constituted dependent measures of self-control. Self-control task performance was significantly impaired when exposed to smoking-related cues compared to neutral cues. No significant presentation-order effects, or interaction effects between stimulus and presentation order, were found. Findings corroborate our hypothesis that resisting smoking urges depletes cigarette smokers' self-control resources and suggests that self-control capacity is governed by a limited resource.

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
1 Clinical & Life Sciences
1.252 Smoking Cessation
1.252.74 Smoking Cessation
Web Of Science research areas
Psychology, Multidisciplinary
ESI research areas
Psychiatry/Psychology
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