Abstract

Introduction: Smoking is associated with significant negative health consequences. It has been suggested that deficient inhibitory control may be implicated in (nicotine) addiction, but its exact role has not yet been elucidated. In the current study, our aim was to investigate the role of inhibitory control in relation to nicotine addiction in contexts that differ in terms of reward. Methods: Participants filled out questionnaires and performed a go/no-go task with three conditions. In one condition, the stimuli were neutral color squares, and in the reward conditions, these were smoking-related pictures and money-related pictures, respectively. In total, 43 non-abstinent individuals that smoke and 35 individuals that do not smoke were included in the sample. Results: The main results showed that individuals that smoke, relative to individuals that do not smoke, had reduced inhibitory control in both reward contexts, relative to a neutral context. The reductions in inhibitory control were mirrored by speeded responses. Conclusions: Individuals that smoke seem to present with reduced inhibitory control, which is most pronounced in contexts of reward. Consistent with incentive sensitization theory, the reduced inhibitory control may be (at least partly) due to the heightened approach bias to reward-related stimuli as indicated by the speeded responses.

Highlights

  • Published: 22 September 2021It is commonly known that smoking represents a serious public health problem; approximately eight million people die of smoking-related diseases each year [1]

  • The main aim of the current study was to assess the relation between nicotine addiction and inhibitory control in contexts that differed in terms of reward

  • The response time data indicate that individuals that smoke may adopt a waiting strategy in the neutral context and engage in faster responding in both reward contexts, which may at least contribute to reduced inhibitory performance

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Summary

Introduction

Published: 22 September 2021It is commonly known that smoking represents a serious public health problem; approximately eight million people die of smoking-related diseases each year [1]. Even in light of this common knowledge, the global prevalence of tobacco smoking in adults is around 20% [1]. This underscores the need for a more thorough understanding of the mechanism that accounts for the persistence of smoking behavior. Previous studies suggest that inhibitory control may be impaired in individuals that smoke [2,3], though some studies do not suggest such a clear relation [4]. The exact role of the reward context on the relation between inhibitory control and nicotine addiction has not yet been thoroughly explored

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