Experimental and Clinical Psychopharmacology, Vol 32(1), Feb 2024, 27-34; doi:10.1037/pha0000669
The incentive-sensitization theory (IST) has emerged as a potentially useful theory in explaining substance addiction. IST postulates that the prolonged use of a substance can alter neural systems that are often involved in incentive motivation and reward processes, leading to an increased “sensitization” to the substance and associated stimuli. However, this increased sensitization is thought to mediate only the individual’s craving of the substance (e.g., their “wanting”), not their enjoyment of the substance (e.g., their “liking”), a process that may involve unconscious implicit changes in cognitive networks linked to specific substances. Consequently, IST may better explain the real-world dissonance reported for individuals who want to accomplish long-term substance cessation but fail to do so, a phenomenon that is common in adolescent smokers. Thus, the present study aimed to examine the principles of IST in a sample of 154 adolescent ad libitum smokers (Mage = 16.57, SDage = 1.12, 61.14% male) utilizing ecological momentary assessment. Data were analyzed utilizing a multilevel structural equation model examining changes in positive affect (PA), negative affect (NA), and stress from Time 1 (T1) and Time 2 (T2) as a function of smoking and tested the influence of implicit cognition (specifically, implicit attitudes about smoking [Implicit Association Test (IAT)]) on these associations. Consistent with the principles of IST, results found a modest significant negative association between smoking status at T1 and PA at T2 (B = −0.11, p = .047). This association was further moderated by IAT (B = −0.19, p = .029) and was particularly potentiated at high levels of IAT (B = −0.44, p B = −0.05, p = .663) or mean levels of IAT (B = −0.25, p = .004). Findings from this study provide additional support to the principles underlying IST and indicate that, in adolescents, smoking may result in thwarted PA indicative of a transition from “liking” toward “wanting,” and this is especially pronounced among those with stronger implicit smoking cognitions. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved)