Smoking motivation: A factor-analytical study |
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Authors: | R. G. Stanaway D. W. Watson |
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Affiliation: | School of Behavioural Science, Newcastle Polytechnic, USA |
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Abstract: | Factor analyses were carried out on the responses of 115 cigarette smokers to the Smoking Questionnaire of Russell et al. (1974), to the Situational Smoking Questionnaire of Frith (1971) and to certain items of a biographical smoking questionnaire. In the analysis of Russell's questionnaire, a set of six factors was extracted, bearing some resemblance to the six factors found by the authors of the questionnaire, although the matching of factors was by no means perfect. However, the results did support Russell et al.'s finding of a major dimension of degree of dependence upon cigarettes, together with an orthogonal factor contrasting pharmacological with non-pharmacological dependence. The analysis of the Situational Smoking Questionnaire confirmed Frith's finding that the first principal component represented a general desire for cigarettes while the second contrasted desire to smoke in high- and low-arousal inducing (or stressful and relaxing) situations; and these two components corresponded fairly well with the first two components extracted from Russell's questionnaire, pharmacological dependence being associated with smoking in stressful situations. |
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