Miglin Rickie, Kable Joseph W, Bowers Maureen E, Ashare Rebecca L
Center for Interdisciplinary Research on Nicotine Addiction, Department of Psychiatry, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA.
Department of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA.
Nicotine Tob Res. 2017 Jun 1;19(6):694-702. doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntw246.
Impulsive decision making is associated with smoking behavior and reflects preferences for smaller, immediate rewards and intolerance of temporal delays. Nicotine withdrawal may alter impulsive decision making and time perception. However, little is known about whether withdrawal-related changes in decision making and time perception predict smoking relapse.
Forty-five smokers (14 female) completed two laboratory sessions, one following 24-hour abstinence and one smoking-as-usual (order counterbalanced; biochemically verified abstinence). During each visit, participants completed measures of time perception, decision making (ie, discount rates), craving, and withdrawal. Following the second laboratory session, subjects underwent a well-validated model of short-term abstinence (quit week) with small monetary incentives for each day of biochemically confirmed abstinence.
Smokers significantly overestimated time during abstinence, compared to smoking-as-usual (p = .021), but there were no abstinence effects on discount rates (p = .6). During the quit week, subjects were abstinent for 3.5 days (SD = 2.15) and smoked a total of 12.9 cigarettes (SD = 15.8). Importantly, higher discount rates (ie, preferences for immediate rewards) during abstinence (abstinence minus smoking difference score) predicted greater number of days abstinent (p = .01) and fewer cigarettes smoked during the quit week (p = .02). Withdrawal-related change in time reproduction did not predict relapse (p = .2).
These data suggest that individuals who have a greater preference for immediate rewards during abstinence (vs. smoking-as-usual) may be more successful at maintaining short-term abstinence when provided with frequent (eg, daily) versus less frequent incentive schedules (eg, 1 month). Abstinence-induced changes in decision making may be important for identifying smokers who may benefit from interventions that incentivize abstinence such as contingency management (CM).
The present results suggest that smokers who place greater subjective value on immediate rewards during withdrawal (compared to smoking-as-usual) may be less likely to relapse if offered small, frequent monetary incentives to maintain abstinence. Thus, the current findings may have important implications for identifying smokers most likely to benefit from particular interventions such as CM. Future research might evaluate whether withdrawal-related changes in delay discounting moderate treatment response to different incentive schedules with the goal of optimizing CM effectiveness to improve abstinence rates.
冲动决策与吸烟行为相关,反映了对较小即时奖励的偏好以及对时间延迟的不耐受。尼古丁戒断可能会改变冲动决策和时间感知。然而,关于决策和时间感知中与戒断相关的变化是否能预测吸烟复发,我们所知甚少。
45名吸烟者(14名女性)完成了两次实验室测试,一次是在24小时戒烟后,另一次是照常吸烟(顺序平衡;经生化验证的戒烟)。在每次测试期间,参与者完成了时间感知、决策(即贴现率)、渴望和戒断的测量。在第二次实验室测试后,受试者经历了一个经过充分验证的短期戒烟模型(戒烟周),每天对经生化确认的戒烟给予小额金钱奖励。
与照常吸烟相比,吸烟者在戒烟期间显著高估了时间(p = 0.021),但戒断对贴现率没有影响(p = 0.6)。在戒烟周期间,受试者戒断了3.5天(标准差 = 2.15),总共吸了12.9支烟(标准差 = 15.8)。重要的是,戒烟期间较高的贴现率(即对即时奖励的偏好)(戒烟减去吸烟差异得分)预测了戒断天数更多(p = 0.01),以及戒烟周期间吸烟支数更少(p = 0.02)。与戒断相关的时间再现变化并不能预测复发(p = 0.2)。
这些数据表明,在戒烟期间(与照常吸烟相比)对即时奖励有更大偏好的个体,在提供频繁(如每日)而非不频繁的奖励计划(如每月)时,可能更成功地维持短期戒烟。戒断引起的决策变化对于识别可能从激励戒烟的干预措施(如应急管理(CM))中受益的吸烟者可能很重要。
目前的结果表明,如果给予小额、频繁的金钱奖励以维持戒烟,在戒断期间(与照常吸烟相比)对即时奖励赋予更高主观价值的吸烟者复发的可能性可能较小。因此,目前的研究结果可能对识别最有可能从特定干预措施(如CM)中受益的吸烟者具有重要意义。未来的研究可能会评估延迟贴现中与戒断相关的变化是否会调节对不同奖励计划的治疗反应,以优化CM的有效性,提高戒烟率。