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. 2012 Mar 13;14(12):1426–1434. doi: 10.1093/ntr/nts006

Table 2.

Associations Among Motivational Dependent Variables Based on Main Effects of Deprivation and Cues

Variable Main effect: deprivation
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
1. Craving 1.00 −0.02 −0.22 0.69* 0.24 0.23 0.18 0.12
2. Nervous ↔ Relaxed −0.12 1.00 0.61*** −0.41 −0.26 −0.35 −0.30 −.12
3. Stressed ↔ Serene −0.39 0.57*** 1.00 −0.44 −0.26 −0.32 −0.29 −0.34
4. Intensity 0.68* −0.26 −0.51 1.00 −0.06 −0.16 −0.06 0.05
5. O max 0.41* 0.00 −0.32 0.18 1.00 0.93*** 0.95*** 0.26
6. P max 0.10 −0.05 −0.14 −0.04 0.78*** 1.00 0.98*** 0.20
7. Breakpoint 0.22 −0.26 −0.18 0.11 0.83*** 0.90*** 1.00 0.21
8. HR 0.08 0.05 −0.06 −0.13 0.25 0.11 0.13 1.00
Main effect: cues
1 2 3 4 5
1. Craving 1.00 −0.26 0.00 −0.35 −0.38*
2. Tense ↔ Calm −0.27 1.00 0.77*** 0.68*** 0.20
3. Nervous ↔ Relaxed 0.01 0.76*** 1.00 0.55*** 0.25
4. Stressed ↔ Serene −0.20 0.45** 0.58*** 1.00 0.18
5. Elasticity (α) −0.46** 0.11 −0.05 0.15 1.00

Note. For deprivation, correlations below the intercepts (1.0) are for the satiation condition (no deprivation) and correlations above the intercepts are for 12-hr deprivation. For cues, correlations below the intercepts are for the neutral cues and correlations above are for smoking cues. Although the associations are provided for descriptive purposes, note that correlations denoted as p < .001 survive a Bonferroni correction.

*p ≤ .05. ** p ≤ .01. *** p ≤ .001.