“…Distress tolerance and experiential avoidance are related but distinct constructs, with experiential avoidance serving as a strategy or function used by individuals low in distress tolerance (Boulanger, Hayes, & Pistorello, 2010). A recent innovation in behavioral smoking cessation treatment has been a shift in focus from reduction of distress severity to reduction of smokers’ EA (Hayes, et al, 1996), and their reactivity to such distress (Brown et al, 2008; Brown et al, 2013; Gifford et al, 2004; Gifford et al, 2011). Beyond smoking, EA has been found to be a central construct in changing mental and behavioral health problems (e.g., Hayes, Luoma, Bond, Masuda, & Lillis, 2006; Hayes, Masuda, Bissett, Luoma, & Guerrero, 2004).…”