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  1. Pubblicazioni

How "Light" Is "Light Smoking"? On the Cognitive Power of Nicotine Dependence

Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2024
Citazione:
How "Light" Is "Light Smoking"? On the Cognitive Power of Nicotine Dependence / Enrico, P., Zorzi, F., Fanari, R., Uccula, A.F., Mercante, B.. - In: BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES. - ISSN 2076-328X. - 14:11(2024). [10.3390/bs14111075]
Abstract:
In recent years, habits related to smoking have been changing. An increasing portion of light/occasional smokers tend to define themselves as non-smokers, leading to an incorrect perception of the risks that smoking even a few cigarettes can entail. In this study, we investigated the nicotine-induced cognitive distortion in young, higher-education students with low/moderate dependence (as indexed by the Fagerstrom questionnaire). The study involved 111 participants (62 female; mean age 24.43 ± 3.77) divided into smokers and non-smokers, who responded to specific questionnaires to evaluate their attachment style, emotion dysregulation, and state anxiety. Their response to smoking-related cues following emotional stimulation was experimentally evaluated, with participants being made to choose between care- or smoking-related images, following the presentation of threatening or neutral stimuli. The results show a cognitive bias in smokers, with participants choosing smoking-related stimuli significantly more often than non-smokers, with a slower reaction time, regardless of emotional cues. Emotion dysregulation and attachment style were also significantly correlated with response choice but not with response latency. Overall, our data indicate that there is no such thing as light use of nicotine and that smoking, even if not continuous, determines cognitive biases that lead to a vision of the environment as a function of substance seeking.
Tipologia CRIS:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
attachment style; emotional dysregulation; light smoking; nicotine dependence
Elenco autori:
Enrico, Paolo; Zorzi, Federico; Fanari, Rachele; Uccula, Arcangelo Francesco; Mercante, Beniamina
Autori di Ateneo:
ENRICO Paolo
MERCANTE Beniamina
UCCULA Arcangelo Francesco
ZORZI Federico
Link alla scheda completa:
https://iris.uniss.it/handle/11388/355409
Pubblicato in:
BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES
Journal
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