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Elsevier, Addictive Behaviors, 1(25), p. 99-102

DOI: 10.1016/s0306-4603(98)00112-9

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Influence of individual differences in craving and obsessive cocaine thoughts on attentional processes in cocaine abuse patients

Journal article published in 2000 by Ingmar H. A. Franken ORCID, Linda Y. Kroon, Vincent M. Hendriks
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This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

In the present pilot-study, the relation between craving, obsessive thoughts about cocaine, experienced control, and attentional bias for cocaine related words is investigated. Sixteen cocaine abuse patients participated in a reaction time (RT) experiment which was employed to measure the ability of subjects to shift their attention away from cocaine related words. Postexperiment craving was found to be positively correlated with reaction times on drug related cues, in contrast to RT on neutral cues. Furthermore, obsessive thoughts about cocaine use and the experienced cocaine use control, in the week before the experiment, were correlated in a higher degree with RTs on drug cues than postexperiment craving. Attentional bias for drug cues was evidenced in patients with higher scores on obsessive cocaine thoughts and higher craving scores. This study shows that individual differences on information processing, within a cocaine abuse patient population, are present.