Cigarette Smoking is Associated with Difficulties in the Use of Reappraisal for Emotion Regulation

Drug and Alcohol Dependence(2021)

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摘要
Background: Negative emotions can promote smoking relapse during a quit attempt. The use of cognitive reappraisal to self-regulate these emotions may therefore aid smoking cessation. Determining whether smokers exhibit difficulties in the use of reappraisal, and which factors are associated with such difficulties, may aid smoking cessations.Methods: 50 smokers and 50 non-smokers completed an online reappraisal task in which they either reappraised or naturally experienced emotions induced by negatively- and neutrally-valenced images that presented situations in either the 1st-person or 3rd-person perspective. Participants also completed the Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale (DERS).Results: Compared to non-smokers, smokers were less successful in using reappraisal to self-regulate emotions elicited by negatively-valenced images (but not neutrally-valenced images). Importantly, this effect was only true for images that were presented in the 1st-person (but not 3rd-person) perspective. Contrary to predictions, there were no group differences in DERS scores. However, exploratory analyses showed that when smokers were split into those who exhibited low vs. high reappraisal success on the reappraisal task (via median split), the low success group exhibited an association between lower reappraisal success and a greater lack of emotional clarity on the DERS, whereas no such association was observed in the high success group.Conclusions: This study provides evidence that smokers may experience difficulties in the use of reappraisal to self-regulate negative emotions induced by situations that appear to be occurring to themselves, and that this deficit may be related to difficulties in understanding the nature and/or valence of the emotion experienced.
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