Aims. To examine the separate and combined effects of cigarette pricing and
cigarette abstinence on smoking. Design. Within-subject design in which pa
rticipants experienced all levels of price and abstinence conditions. Setti
ng. Laboratory conditions. Participants. Nine human cigarette smokers. Inte
rvention. Cigarette prices were manipulated across a 60-fold range (US$0.02
-$1.20) in separate abstinent (5 + hours of non-smoking) and non-abstinent
conditions. Participants earned money by pulling a response plunger (US$0.1
0 per 100 pulls) and could either keep the money or spend it on cigarette p
uffs. Measurements. Total response output, cigarette consumption, price ela
sticity of demand and spending patterns. Findings. Participants spent their
earnings on cigarette puffs more quickly when abstinent than when they had
smoked ad libitum before the session, and latency to spend money on puffs
was a linear increasing function of price. Effects of abstinence on rates o
f smoking were a function of the price at which cigarette puffs could be pu
rchased. At low prices participants smoked more puffs per session when abst
inent, but this difference was negligible at high puff prices. Abstinence a
nd non-abstinence effects were temporary, and tended to wane in the second
90 minutes of the sessions. During the first half of the sessions, demand f
or cigarettes war more inelastic during the abstinent condition than the no
n-abstinent condition, indicating relative insensitivity to price increases
when abstinent. Conclusions. Behavioral-economic procedures and measures a
re sensitive to cigarette-abstinence manipulations and the laboratory metho
ds employed here may prove beneficial in evaluating the probable effects of
public-policy initiatives designed to reduce cigarette use.