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Tuberculosis Risk In Male Smokers With High Vitamin C Intake May Be Increased By Vitamin E
Six-year vitamin E supplementation increased tuberculosis risk by 72% in male smokers who had high dietary vitamin C intake, but vitamin E had no effect on those who had low dietary vitamin C intake, according to a study published in the British Journal
read more ...03/05/08
New Generation Of Tobacco Products Threatens Efforts To Reduce Tobacco Use, Save Lives In U.S.
An insidious new generation of tobacco products is threatening efforts to reduce tobacco use in the United States. A new report issued by a coalition of public health organizations describes how tobacco manufacturers take advantage of the lack of governm
read more ...03/05/08
Scotland: Schools To Get Smoking Clinics
Stop smoking clinics will be run in schools as part of a new drive to help city pupils give up smoking.
read more ...03/05/08
Exposure To Smokers In Movies Increases Likelihood Of Smoking In The Future, New Study Shows

06/21/07

A new study appearing in the July issue of Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, reports that watching an actor smoke on the big screen may make smokers more likely to continue smoking in the future, and make nonsmokers more favorably disposed toward smoking. Sonya Dal Cin, Postdoctoral Fellow at the Norris Cotton Cancer Center of Dartmouth Medical School, and colleagues from the University of Waterloo and Central Michigan University, assessed the level to which identification with a protagonist on film alters our implicit associations between the self and smoking. They studied 52 male college undergrads, about half of which reported daily smoking habits. The participants then watched a clip from the same movie in which the protagonist either smoked or did not smoke. After the clip, the participants reported how much they identified with the character and their evaluation of him. The researchers then administered a standard Implicit Association Test to gather information on the participant's implicit thoughts about smoking. The results were clear. For both smokers and non-smokers, identification with the smoking protagonist led to greater implicit association of smoking with the self. Thus, exposure to smoking in a movie has an influence on smoking-related thoughts. These results show preliminary evidence of a mechanism through which smoking in movies exerts its effects on the audience's implicit beliefs. The study is part of a larger program of research on the persuasive impact of stories and the effect that identifying with characters has on one's own self-concept. Dal Cin writes that "exposure to behaviors in film can exert subtle influence" on our behavior. She also explains that examining the identification process between audience and character may help determine why some individuals enact violent behaviors they observe in the media, while others do not. "Our finding that exposure to smoking in a movie affected non-smokers as well doesn't mean that non-smokers are suddenly going to be lighting up. However, the subtle influence of smoking in the movies may lead non-smokers to be slightly less negative about smoking or may lead them to believe that smoking is a more normal behavior than would otherwise be the case," said Geoffrey T. Fong, Psychology Professor at the University of Waterloo, and a co-author of the study. ### Author Contact: Sonya Dal Cin Psychological Science is ranked among the top 10 general psychology journals for impact by the Institute for Scientific Information. Contact: Catherine West

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