486
Views
4
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Research Article

Cue-elicited craving and human Pavlovian-to-instrumental transfer

ORCID Icon, , &
Pages 482-488 | Received 16 Jul 2018, Accepted 01 Nov 2018, Published online: 09 Jan 2019

References

  • Babor TF, Higgins-Biddle JC, Saunders JB, Monteiro MG, World Health Organization. 2001. AUDIT: The alcohol use disorders identification test: Guidelines for use in primary health care.
  • Bailey SR, Goedeker KC, Tiffany ST. 2010. The impact of cigarette deprivation and cigarette availability on cue–reactivity in smokers. Addiction. 105(2):364–372.
  • Bohn MJ, Krahn DD, Staehler BA. 1995. Development and initial validation of a measure of drinking urges in abstinent alcoholics. Alcoholism Clin Exp Res. 19(3):600–606.
  • Carter BL, Tiffany ST. 2001. The cue-availability paradigm: the effects of cigarette availability on cue reactivity in smokers. Exp Clin Psychopharmacol. 9(2):183–190.
  • Cartoni E, Balleine B, Baldassarre G. 2016. Appetitive Pavlovian-instrumental transfer: a review. Neurosci Biobehavioral Rev. 71:829–848.
  • Cooney NL, Litt MD, Morse PA, Bauer LO, Gaupp L. 1997. Alcohol cue reactivity, negative-mood reactivity, and relapse in treated alcoholic men. J Abnormal Psychol. 106(2):243.
  • Cousineau D. 2005. Confidence intervals in within-subject designs: a simpler solution to Loftus and Masson’s method. Tutorials Quantitative Methods Psychol. 1(1):42–45.
  • Dols M, Hout Mvd, Kindt M, Willems B. 2002. The urge to smoke depends on the expectation of smoking. Addiction. 97(1):87–93.
  • Dols M, Willems B, Bittoun R. 2000. Smokers can learn to influence their urge to smoke. Addictive Behaviors. 25(1):103–108.
  • Droungas A, Ehrman RN, Childress AR, O'Brien CP. 1995. Effect of smoking cues and cigarette availability on craving and smoking behavior. Addictive Behaviors. 20(5):657–673.
  • Drummond DC, Phillips TS. 2002. Alcohol urges in alcohol‐dependent drinkers: further validation of the Alcohol Urge Questionnaire in an untreated community clinical population. Addiction. 97(11):1465–1472.
  • Hardy L, Mitchell C, Seabrooke T, Hogarth L. 2017. Drug cue reactivity involves hierarchical instrumental learning: evidence from a biconditional Pavlovian to instrumental transfer task. Psychopharmacology (Berl). 234(13):1977–1984.
  • Hitsman B, Hogarth L, Tseng L-J, Teige JC, Shadel WG, DiBenedetti DB, Danto S, Lee TC, Price LH, Niaura R. 2013. Dissociable effect of acute varenicline on tonic versus cue-provoked craving in non-treatment-motivated heavy smokers. Drug Alcohol Dependence. 130(1-3):135–141.
  • Hogarth L. 2012. Goal-directed and transfer-cue-elicited drug-seeking are dissociated by pharmacotherapy: evidence for independent additive controllers. J Exp Psychol Animal Beh Proc. 38(3):266–278.
  • Hogarth L, Chase HW. 2011. Parallel goal-directed and habitual control of human drug-seeking: Implications for dependence vulnerability. J Exp Psychol Animal Beh Proc. 37(3):261–276.
  • Hogarth L, Chase HW. 2012. Evaluating psychological markers for human nicotine dependence: tobacco choice, extinction, and Pavlovian-to-instrumental transfer. Exp Clin Psychopharmacol. 20(3):213–224.
  • Hogarth L, Dickinson A, Duka T. 2010. The associative basis of cue-elicited drug taking in humans. Psychopharmacology. 208(3):337–351.
  • Hogarth L, Dickinson A, Wright A, Kouvaraki M, Duka T. 2007. The role of drug expectancy in the control of human drug seeking. J Exp Psychol Animal Beh Proc. 33(4):484–496.
  • Hogarth L, Retzler C, Munafò MR, Tran DMD, Troisi JR, II, Rose AK, Jones A, Field M. 2014. Extinction of cue-evoked drug-seeking relies on degrading hierarchical instrumental expectancies. Beh Res Therapy. 59:61–70.
  • MacKillop J. 2006. Factor structure of the alcohol urge questionnaire under neutral conditions and during a cue‐elicited urge state. Alcoholism Clin Exp Res. 30(8):1315–1321.
  • MacKillop J, O’Hagen S, Lisman SA, Murphy JG, Ray LA, Tidey JW, McGeary JE, Monti PM. 2010. Behavioral economic analysis of cue-elicited craving for alcohol. Addiction (Abingdon, England). 105(9):1599–1607.
  • Martinovic J, Jones A, Christiansen P, Rose AK, Hogarth L, Field M. 2014. Electrophysiological responses to alcohol cues are not associated with Pavlovian-to-instrumental transfer in social drinkers. PLoS ONE. 9(4):e94605.
  • Morey RD. 2008. Confidence intervals from normalized data: a correction to Cousineau (2005). Reason. 4(2):61–64.
  • Palfai TP. 2006. Activating action tendencies: the influence of action priming on alcohol consumption among male hazardous drinkers. J Studies Alcohol. 67(6):926–933.
  • Perkins KA. 2011. Subjective reactivity to smoking cues as a predictor of quitting success. Nicotine Tobacco Res. 14(4):383–387.
  • Rose AK, Brown K, MacKillop J, Field M, Hogarth L. 2018. Alcohol devaluation has dissociable effects on distinct components of alcohol behaviour. Psychopharmacology. 235:1233–1244.
  • Seabrooke T, Hogarth L, Mitchell C. 2016. The propositional basis of cue-controlled reward seeking. Quart J Exp Psychol. 69(12):2452.
  • Seabrooke T, Le Pelley ME, Hogarth L, Mitchell CJ. 2017. Evidence of a goal-directed process in human Pavlovian-instrumental transfer. J Exp Psychol Animal Learning Cognition. 43:377–387.
  • Watson P, Wiers RW, Hommel B, de Wit S. 2014. Working for food you don’t desire. Cues interfere with goal-directed food-seeking. Appetite. 79:139–148.
  • Watson P, Wiers RW, Hommel B, Ridderinkhof KR, de Wit S. 2016. An associative account of how the obesogenic environment biases adolescents' food choices. Appetite. 96:560–571.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.