Smoking Cessation Clinical Trial
Official title:
Employing Episodic Future Thinking About Mating Opportunities to Induce Lower Cigarette Consumption
The current proposal aims to develop and establish the effectiveness of a novel behavioral smoking cessation intervention. Previous research has shown that having smokers engage in episodic future thinking (EFT) about specific positive life outcomes that they could experience if they quit smoking immediately can be an effective means of reducing cigarette consumption. This intervention allowed participants to generate their own general positive life outcomes. While the existing intervention approaches motivation from a generalist perspective, the current proposal seeks to modify this intervention to fit within a Fundamental Social Motives (FSM) framework. The FSM framework posits that there exist individual differences in fundamental social motives such as self-protection, disease avoidance, affiliation, kin care, and mating motives such that some individuals are more motivated to work toward some of these goals than others. Specifically, the current proposal seeks to develop an EFT intervention that appeals to fundamental mating motives by asking participants to imagine positive mating outcomes that they might experience in one year's time if they were to quit smoking immediately. This will be accomplished via two empirical studies. Study 1 will compare the effectiveness of the mating-EFT intervention to the general-EFT intervention and a yoked control condition while examining the possibility that individual differences in relationship status, mating motives, self-efficacy, and nicotine dependence moderate these effects. Study 2 will employ a quasi-experimental design to test the effectiveness of this intervention using a tailored messaging approach, assigning smokers who are either single and motivated to seek new mates or involved in a committed relationship and not motivated to seek new mates to complete the general or mating-EFT or a control task. The investigators predict that the mating-EFT will be more effective than the general EFT in reducing cigarette consumption, particularly if it is administered to participants who have more active mating goals.
Status | Not yet recruiting |
Enrollment | 270 |
Est. completion date | December 31, 2020 |
Est. primary completion date | December 31, 2020 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Age 18 or older - Fluent in English - Current smoker - Motivated to quit or reduce their cigarette consumption Exclusion Criteria: - Under 18 years of age - Not fluent in English - Not currently a smoker - Not motivated to quit or reduce cigarette consumption |
Country | Name | City | State |
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n/a |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
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East Carolina University |
Chiou WB, Wu WH. Episodic Future Thinking Involving the Nonsmoking Self Can Induce Lower Discounting and Cigarette Consumption. J Stud Alcohol Drugs. 2017 Jan;78(1):106-112. — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Cigarette Consumption | During the initial session, participants will be asked to report how many cigarettes they smoke during a typical week. This will serve as a baseline to which the number of cigarettes smoked following exposure to the interventions will be compared. This within-subjects comparison will complement the between-subjects comparison that will be used in order to test the effectiveness of the manipulation within each group. | 7 days | |
Secondary | Motivation to Quit or Reduce Smoking | Participants will also report their level of motivation to quit smoking or reduce their cigarette consumption as well as how motivated they are by different positive life outcomes that could result from quitting. This measurement will serve as both a manipulation check (with participants in the mating-EFT condition expected to report that they are more motivated by mating-related benefits of smoking cessation compared to the other conditions) as well as a secondary dependent variable that will also allow us to determine whether motivation is a mechanism influencing smoking cessation efforts. | 7 days |
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