https://www.selleckchem.com/products/as601245.html Conclusion The results reflect the participants' perspective on what is meaningful to them when trying to quit smoking and adds important knowledge to future smoking cessation studies in this patient group.An external focus of attention can improve performance, but there is little research on effects for the elderly in every day, well-learned mobility tasks. 57 older and 59 young adults performed the sit-to-stand and stand-to-sit while holding a cup, at three difficulty levels (cup empty or full, at normal or fast speed). Half were instructed to focus internally (on their movements) and half externally (on the cup). The effects of focus, age, and difficulty level were tested for movement time, mean inclination of the cup, inclination variability, and smoothness with 2 × 2 × 3 ANOVAs. Significant effects of difficulty were consistent across variables (p  less then  0.05). An effect of focus was present only for the inclination variability of the stand-to-sit (p  less then  0.03), favoring an internal focus (less variability). The age × focus interaction was significant for mean cup inclination, but post hoc tests failed to reveal any significant differences. The results of this study, together with the literature, suggest that an external focus may not benefit the performance of young or older adults in general mobility activities of daily living. The prevalent assumption that an external focus is always beneficial for performance needs further empirical testing.Eye and hand movements are often made in isolation but for reaching movements they are usually coupled. Despite this, evidence for spatial coupling between the eye and hand effector is mixed and have usually been restricted to straight-line movements, while real-world hand movements have complex trajectories. Here, using a novel obstacle avoidance task where an obstacle appeared in an infrequent number of trials, we establish a stronger link between the sacca