Slip-ups and relapse in attempts to quit smoking☆
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Advances in biofeedback and neurofeedback studies on smoking
2020, NeuroImage: ClinicalEffect of nicotine lozenge use prior to smoking cue presentation on craving and withdrawal symptom severity
2020, Drug and Alcohol DependenceCitation Excerpt :Among the most common smoking triggers reported is the presence of people or objects associated with smoking (i.e., smoking cues) (Borland, 1990; Shiffman, 1982; Shiffman et al., 1996). Studies have shown that presentation of smoking cues leads to rapid increases in craving and withdrawal symptoms and that exposure to smoking cues often precedes relapse (Borland, 1990; Carter and Tiffany, 1999; Ferguson and Shiffman, 2009; Payne et al., 1991; Shiffman et al., 1996; Shiffman, 1982). Studies evaluating various dosage forms of medicinal nicotine (i.e., patch, gum, lozenge) have found that they are effective at reducing overall craving and withdrawal symptoms severity (Germovsek et al., 2019; Jorenby et al., 1999, 1996; Shiffman, 2008; West and Shiffman, 2001).
Smoking relapse situations among a community-recruited sample of Spanish daily smokers
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This research was funded by the Anti-Cancer Council of Victoria and the Victorian Smoking and Health Program. Thanks are due to David Hill and Virginia Lewis for comments on an earlier version of this manuscript.