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= 918) introduced choice behavior as outcome variables, revealing that sadness causally increased impatience for cigarette puffs. Moreover, study 4 revealed that the effect of sadness on impatience was more fully explained by concomitant appraisals of self-focus, which are specific to sadness, than by concomitant appraisals of negative valence, which are general to all negative emotions. Importantly, study 4 also examined the topography of actual smoking behavior, finding that experimentally induced sadness (as compared to neutral emotion) causally increased the volume and duration of cigarette puffs inhaled. Together, the present studies provide support for a more nuanced model regarding the effects of emotion on tobacco use, in particular, as well as on addictive behavior, in general.
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Charles Dorison
Georgetown University
Ke Wang
Vaughan W. Rees
Harvard University
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Harvard University
Harvard University Press
Boston University
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Dorison et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a11dccafb24b1a422a56c7a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1909888116