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By Seth Roberts | March 5th 2007 09:47 PM | 5 comments | Print | E-mail | Track Comments
About Seth

I am a professor of psychology at UC Berkeley and author of View Seth's Profile

A few days ago on the Dean Edell radio show, I’m told, Dean Edell told his listeners that nicotine patches don’t cause any addiction problems; people just don’t get addicted to them. To anyone who has read The Shangri-La Diet this will sound eerily familiar: Dr. William Jacobs, a professor of psychiatry and addiction researcher at the University of Florida, told me that no one gets addicted to unflavored sugar water, although lots of people get addicted to Coke, Pepsi, and other forms of flavored sugar water.

These examples suggest is that it isn’t the drug (sugar, nicotine) that causes addiction, it’s the signal of the drug — the conditioned stimulus (CS), to use animal-learning jargon. No signal, no addiction. In the case of sugar water, it’s very clear: Digestion of calories provides little or no pleasure. Ingestion of sweet-tasting things provides just a little pleasure. Ingestion of a flavor that has been paired with calories many times, such as the flavor of Coke, provides a lot of pleasure. The pattern with nicotine may be similar: Nicotine itself provides little or no pleasure. It is learned signals of nicotine — events repeated followed by nicotine — that can be very pleasant.

The practical application is that you may not need nicotine patches to quit smoking. It may be enough to hold your nose while you smoke. (The nose-clipping that SLD forum readers are familiar with.) When you smoke, the smell may become the CS. With this way of smoking you could have cigarettes whenever you wanted. You’d just come to want them less and less.

Likewise, it may be possible to get rid of an addiction to coffee by holding your nose while you drink it.

Thanks to Carl Willat.


Comments

What if i am addicted to sex? What do i hold for that? :)

Merci pour l'information ici

Very difficult to eliminate smoking habit, but is not meaning impossible to. Thanks for sharing, this article is very useful

The idea conditioned stimulus (CS) might be very true in our daily live. Take the taste of hot and spicy as an example. The more you eat hot and spicy food, the more you will like it.

conditioned stimulus = stimulus if the condition is satisfied
One interesting consequence here might be that addiction itself is may have degrees and variations depending on
1) how well defined was the condition
2) how strong is the stimulus

Another aspect is that following this point of view
people are addicted to having food water, going to the restroom and many other normal stuff
We just do not call this "addiction" because it is the part of normal functioning.
Although mechanics is probably the same well defined condition + strong stimulus.

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