> "Effects of nicotine on perceptual speed" [1] is behind a paywall, and I can't tell from the abstract whether the results also apply to non-smokers.
I need to apologize a little bit here; I've been checking my article and it seems I inserted the wrong link for that citation. The one I actually wanted is http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/BF02245346 'Smoking and Raven IQ', Stough et al 1994. Also paywalled, but I'm working on getting them. (My university access doesn't cover SpringerLink so I need to ask other people to get them for me.)
> Because in my experience its completely, totally wrong. I could clearly separate 2 phases that I went through when I quit:
Let me point out that your subsequent lines indicate you are talking about your addiction to tobacco, not to nicotine.
> Let me point out that your subsequent lines indicate you are talking about your addiction to tobacco, not to nicotine
Yeah, but only for the second phase of the quit. I went half-way through the exact same first phase in a previous quit, by using patches for 2 weeks first.
Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitor(s). Many antidepressants fall into this category. MAOI's inhibit the enzyme that cleans up several endogenous molecules, like serotonin, and some drugs, like the amphetamines.
I need to apologize a little bit here; I've been checking my article and it seems I inserted the wrong link for that citation. The one I actually wanted is http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/BF02245346 'Smoking and Raven IQ', Stough et al 1994. Also paywalled, but I'm working on getting them. (My university access doesn't cover SpringerLink so I need to ask other people to get them for me.)
> Because in my experience its completely, totally wrong. I could clearly separate 2 phases that I went through when I quit:
Let me point out that your subsequent lines indicate you are talking about your addiction to tobacco, not to nicotine.