The Journal of Physiological Sciences
Online ISSN : 1880-6562
Print ISSN : 1880-6546
ISSN-L : 1880-6546

This article has now been updated. Please use the final version.

Subjective and Autonomic Responses to Smoking-Related Visual Cues
Younbyoung ChaeJeung-Chan LeeKyung-Mo ParkO-Seok KangHi-Joon ParkHyejung Lee
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JOURNAL FREE ACCESS Advance online publication

Article ID: RP014207

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Abstract
Nicotine, like several other abused drugs, is known to act on the reward system in the brain. Smoking-associated cues produce smoking urges and cravings accompanied by autonomic dysfunction to these cues in smokers. The present study was aimed at investigating whether cues related to smoking elicit the autonomic response in smokers. Subjective and physiological reactivity to a smoking-related visual cue of seven smokers and 12 nonsmokers was assessed in a supine position under indirect dim light using a self-assessment manikin and a specially designed pupillometer. The experimental procedure consisted of the elicitation and measurement of pupil size (PS) while viewing a smoking image and images from three valence-defined categories (i.e., pleasant, unpleasant, and neutral) based on normative affective ratings selected from the International Affective Picture System. Both smokers and nonsmokers produced significantly larger PS increases to pleasant or unpleasant images compared to neutral images. In smokers, viewing smoking-related visual cues, but no other affective images, produced significantly larger PSs compared to nonsmokers. In addition, smokers rated the smoking image with more pleasure and arousal than nonsmokers. These findings suggest that cues related to smoking induce not only a subjective emotional alteration but also sympathetic activation, measured by the time-series PS data in smokers.
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© 2008 by The Physiological Society of Japan
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