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Brain imaging demonstrates former smokers to have greater willpower: Study

Functional MRI images were obtained while current smokers, former smokers and non-smokers performed tasks designed to assess specific cognitive skills that were reasoned to be important for smoking abstinence.

Brain imaging demonstrates former smokers to have greater willpower: Study

A study has found that former smokers have greater willpower than current smokers and non-smokers.

The study by researchers from Trinity College and the Research Institute for a Tobacco Free Society, Dublin, Ireland, compared former smokers to current smokers and non-smokers.

Functional MRI images were obtained while current smokers, former smokers and non-smokers performed tasks designed to assess specific cognitive skills that were reasoned to be important for smoking abstinence.

These included a response inhibition task to assess impulse control and the ability to monitor one's behaviour and an attention task, which assessed the ability to avoid distraction from smoking-related images, which tend to elicit an automatic attention response in smokers.

The investigators found that when doing these tasks, the current smokers compared to the non-smokers showed reduced functioning in prefrontal regions that are related to controlling behaviour.

In addition, the current smokers showed elevated activity in sub-cortical regions such as the nucleus accumbens that respond to the reward value or salience of the nicotine stimuli.

However, in marked contrast, the former smokers did not show this sub-cortical activity, but instead showed increased activity in the frontal lobes - the areas that are critically involved in controlling behaviour.

Moreover, the former smokers were "super-normal", showing greater levels of activity in these prefrontal regions than the never-smokers.

The implication is that the brain regions responsible for what might be considered "willpower" show more activity in those who have quit smoking.

This type of willpower can be measured, can be related to specific brain regions, and would appear to be related to being able to quit cigarettes.

These results reinforce the value of smoking cessation therapies that stress the importance of, or that help to train, the cognitive skills involved in exercising control over drug desires.

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