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Journal article

Isolating behavioural economic indices of demand in relation to nicotine dependence

Abstract

RationaleCharacterisation of drug dependence using principles from behavioural economics has provided a more detailed understanding of the disorder. Although questionnaires assessing economic demand for cigarettes have extended these principles to nicotine addiction, aspects of the reliability and selectivity of these questionnaires remain uncertain.ObjectiveAcross two experiments, we attempted to reproduce significant associations of the cigarette purchase task with nicotine dependence in a young adult population of smokers and contrasted this measure with a novel chocolate purchase task. We also examined the association between these measures and performance on a preference task, measuring preference for cigarettes and chocolate.MethodsQuestionnaire measures were used within a university setting.ResultsIn experiment 1, we observed associations between nicotine dependence and measures of behavioural economic demand for cigarettes, particularly Omax. In experiment 2, we replicated these findings again and extended them to show that similar correlations between nicotine dependence and demand for chocolate were not observed. Moreover, the indices of demand and choices on a concurrent choice cigarette task were moderately associated with each other and independently associated with nicotine dependence.ConclusionsThe two experiments clearly supported previous findings regarding the association between nicotine dependence and economic demand for cigarettes. We extend these observations by showing that the generalisation of economic demand across different commodities is relatively weak, but that generalisation across different procedures is strong. Our results therefore support behavioural economic models of nicotine addiction which emphasise a robust proximal role for the incentive value of cigarettes.

Authors

Chase HW; MacKillop J; Hogarth L

Journal

Psychopharmacology, Vol. 226, No. 2, pp. 371–380

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

March 1, 2013

DOI

10.1007/s00213-012-2911-x

ISSN

0033-3158

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