Recent studies on reinforcer valuation in social situations  have informed research on mental illness. Social temporal discounting may be a  way to examine effects of social context on the devaluation of delayed  reinforcers. In prior research with non-drug-using groups, we demonstrated that  individuals discount delayed rewards less rapidly (i.e., value the future more)  for a group of which they are a member than they do for themselves alone.  
The current study examined how cigarette smoking and level of  alcohol use relate to rates of delay and social temporal  discounting.
In this study, we used crowd-sourcing technology to contact a  large number of individuals (N = 796). Some of these individuals were  hazardous-to-harmful drinkers (n = 269), whereas others were non-problem  drinkers (n = 523); some were smokers (n = 182), whereas others  were nonsmokers (n = 614). Delay discounting questionnaires for  individual rewards (me now, me later) and for group rewards (we now, we later;  me now, we later) were used to measure individuals’ discounting rates across  various social contexts. 
Our analyses found that smokers discounted delayed rewards  more rapidly than controls under all conditions. However, hazardous-to-harmful  drinkers discounted delayed rewards significantly more rapidly than the  non-problem drinkers under the individual condition, but not under the social  conditions. 
This finding suggests that the use of different abused drugs  may be associated with excessive discounting in the individual condition and has  selective effects when discounting for a group in the social conditions.
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Request Reprint E-Mail: wkbickel@vt.edu.
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Request Reprint E-Mail: wkbickel@vt.edu.
 
