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Release Date: November 15, 1999
Contact:Jose Contreras-Vidal, PhD
(301)
405-2495
pepeum@wam.umd.edu
Chewing Tobacco Hampers Ability To Perform Complex Tasks
The nicotine in smokeless tobacco reduces an individual's ability to perform
complex tasks that require hand and body movements to adjust to new visual feedback,
according to new research.
During a visuo-motor task, smokeless tobacco users exhibited slower learning and
adjustment to new requirements, more jerks, slower and more irregular movements, and less
accurate overall performance compared to non-smokers.
"Our results suggest that tobacco use on the job can reduce an individual's
capability to learn new visuo-motor mapping and adapt his or her performance to new visual
feedback," said lead author Jose Contreras-Vidal, PhD, University of Maryland
Department of Kinesiology.
Participants were tested individually for approximately two hours on three separate
tasks that required drawing the straightest possible path as quickly as possible from a
central point on a computer screen to a target that lit up in one of four different
positions on the edges of the screen. The results of the study conducted by researchers at
the University of Maryland and Arizona State University appear in the November issue of Nicotine
& Tobacco.
The first baseline task was performed by 10 tobacco users after at least eight hours of
tobacco abstinence, and by 11 non-users. No differences in performance were found between
the two groups on this trial.
Tobacco users then were given a pinch of smokeless tobacco immediately before the
second test, in which the feedback screen was rotated by 45 degrees. Tobacco chewers
performed this task significantly below the level of non-users on accuracy and smoothness
of movements. Non-smokers greatly reduced the jerkiness of their movements between
sessions one and two, while tobacco users did not.
The third test, a post-adaptation session, was identical with the first. It was
intended to measure readaptation following the 45 degree rotation of targets in the second
session. Non-users continued to improve the smoothness of their movements in this session,
but tobacco chewers did not.
The research was supported by the Smokeless Tobacco Research Council.
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Nicotine & Tobacco Research is the official peer-reviewed
quarterly journal of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco. For information
about the journal, contact Gary E. Swan, PhD, at (650) 859-5322.
Center for the Advancement of Health
Contact: Petrina Chong
Director of Communications
202.387.2829
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