Affiliation:
1. Department of Psychology, Polytechnic of East London, London E15 4LZ, UK
Abstract
Twenty regular smokers ( > 15 cigarettes/day), were tested on a letter cancellation task, over four successive days. On one of the test days subjects were smoking deprived for > 12 h, while on the other days they were not nicotine deprived (smoking was allowed until 1 h before testing). The first letter cancellation test was given prior to smoking. Then one cigarette was smoked and a second letter cancellation test given. Performance was significantly impaired by nicotine deprivation, when assessed both by response time (p < 0.05) and target detection (p < 0.001). Cigarette smoking led to significant improvements in both speed and accuracy with the deprived smokers. However, this improved performance basically reflected a return to near baseline values. The performance of the non-deprived subjects remained largely unchanged. There was no evidence of performance differences between high, mid and low frequency letter targets. Each showed an accuracy reduction of about 5% during smoking deprivation, and returned to baseline following nicotine reinstatement. Thus, while sustained attention was significantly influenced by nicotine status, there was no evidence of altered attentional selectivity.
Subject
Pharmacology (medical),Psychiatry and Mental health,Pharmacology
Cited by
41 articles.
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