2013
DOI: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2012.09.004
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Implicit and explicit reward learning in chronic nicotine use

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Cited by 14 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…Reward sensitivity was the only impulsivity-related personality trait that showed no association either with smoking status or severity of nicotine dependence. One possible explanation might be that prolonged nicotine use reduces reward sensitivity (Versace et al, 2011;Paelecke-Habermann et al, 2013). It could be the case that the adult smokers in the present analysis had high reward sensitivity when they started smoking, but after a period of smoking, they showed lower levels of reward sensitivity due to inhibitory effects of their nicotine use.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 70%
“…Reward sensitivity was the only impulsivity-related personality trait that showed no association either with smoking status or severity of nicotine dependence. One possible explanation might be that prolonged nicotine use reduces reward sensitivity (Versace et al, 2011;Paelecke-Habermann et al, 2013). It could be the case that the adult smokers in the present analysis had high reward sensitivity when they started smoking, but after a period of smoking, they showed lower levels of reward sensitivity due to inhibitory effects of their nicotine use.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 70%
“…The mean age range of individuals varied from 21.5 years (Chamberlain et al, 2012) to 76.8 years old (Galanis et al, 1997). Several studies compared individuals within particular age groups, such as young adults (Chamberlain et al, 2012;Deary et al, 2003;Paelecke-Habermann et al, 2013;Smolka et al 2004;Yakir et al, 2006) middle aged adults (Carim-Todd et al, 2015;Durazzo et al, 2012;Friend et al, 2005;Hatta et al, 2006;Kalmijn et al, 2002;Luhar et al, 2013;Sabia et al, 2012, Schinka et al, 2002, and elderly (Chen et al, 2003;Galanis et al, 1997;Hill et al, 1989;Launer et al, 1996;Razani et al, 2004). Average years of education varied from 2.9 years (Chen et al, 2003) to 16 years (Carim-Todd et al, 2015).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In any case, chlorpromazine equivalent doses did not significantly correlate with any of the relevant outputs of the study. Tobacco was not controlled for in this study, which may modify task performance in cognitive tasks and smoker subjects may represent a subgroup of subjects with higher impairment in the reward system [50][51][52][53].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%