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Anticipated Outcomes and Gambling Behaviour

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Outline overall project/theory and discuss preliminary results ... Psychology & Psychotherapy: Theory, Research & Practice, 80(1), 107-125. Slide 21 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Anticipated Outcomes and Gambling Behaviour


1
Anticipated Outcomes and Gambling Behaviour
  • Why we pay for chance to win

Mal Flack Charles Darwin University
2
Overview
  • Outline overall project/theory and discuss
    preliminary results
  • The attractions to gambling An overview
  • Introduce model
  • Preliminary results anticipated outcomes and
    gambling behaviour
  • Conclusion and Questions

3
Aim and theoretical hypothesis
  • Aim To explore the perceived benefits of
    gambling and investigate how they relate to
    gambling behaviour
  • Theoretical hypothesis A range of anticipated
    outcomes will be related to gambling behaviour

4
Key Attractions
  • Winning (Money)
  • Money as a primary motivation
  • (e.g. Neighbors et al., 2002 Platz Miller,
    2001)
  • Personal beliefs in the ability to win
  • (e.g. Cantinotti et al., 2004 Mattson 2008
    Miller2008)
  • Emotional Value
  • The buzz and excitement
  • (e.g. Pantalon, et al.2008 Rockloff Dyer,
    2006 Sharpe, 2004)
  • Tune out, forget and relax
  • (Diskin Hodgins,1999 Ricketts Macaskill,
    2003 Wood Griffiths, 2007).
  • Social
  • Socialisation
  • (Cotte, 1997 Lalander, 2006 Ocean Smith,
    1993).
  • Social influences
  • (Larimer Neighbors, 2003 Neighbors et
    al.,2007)

5
An Expectancy Based Model
Excitement
6
Anticipated Outcomes
Excitement
Escape
Future Plans to Gamble
Gambling Behaviour
Anticipated Outcomes
Financial Benefit
Social Attraction
  • Consumer and motivational based research compared
    to the anticipated outcomes measures proposed.
  • Similar to proposed model although not quite as
    comprehensive
  • Relatively new to the gambling field and to date
    focused on visitors to casinos and student
    populations
  • Anticipated outcomes measures are modelled on the
    following papers Breen Zuckerman, 1999
    Chantal, et al.,1995 Gillespie et al, 2007 Lee
    et al., 2006 Lee et al., 2007 Walters Contri,
    1998)

Enhance
7
Preliminary Study Sample characteristics and
procedure
  • Sample N304 (167 female, 128 males)
  • Mean age 37.16 (SD11.48)
  • Vocation 66 working full-time, 12 part-time,
    8.6 students, 3.3 home duties.
  • Most respondents engaged in some form of gambling
    within the last 12 months (91.1) and 28.3 once
    a month or more on some activity.
  • Participants were recruited via adverts in local
    paper, letter box drops, web link placed on
    organisations web page, email and employees
    approached at two different gambling venues.

8
Descriptive Statistics
9
(No Transcript)
10
Descriptive Statistics
Mid Point 3.5
11
Anticipated outcomes, plans to gamble and
gambling behaviour
SampleGambled more than once a year on any
activity except lottery (n176) All correlation
coefficients significant plt.01
12
Predicting plans to gamble
Summary steps in Hierarchical Multiple Regression
Analysis Predicting of Plans to Gamble
Note ß significant at final regression
equation p lt .05, R2 Change Variance explained
at each block, Sig. F Significance change at
each block.
13
Type of anticipated outcome and gambling
frequency
14
Perceived monetary benefit by preferred gambling
type
15
Perceived enhancement benefit by preferred
gambling type
16
Perceived excitement by preferred gambling type
17
Socialisation by preferred gambling type
18
Conclusion
  • Anticipated outcomes appear to reliably relate to
    plans to gamble and gambling frequency
  • Differences in perceived benefits between
    gambling preferences
  • Limitations

19
References
  • Breen, R. B., Zuckerman, M. (1999). 'Chasing'
    in gambling behavior Personality and cognitive
    determinants. Personality and Individual
    Differences, 27(6), 1097-1111.
  • Cantinotti, M., Ladouceur, R., Jacques, C.
    (2004). Sports Betting Can Gamblers Beat
    Randomness? Psychology of Addictive Behaviors,
    18(2), 143-147.
  • Chantal, Y., Vallerand, R. J., Vallieres, E.
    (1995). Motivation and gambling involvement. The
    Journal of Social Psychology, v135(6), 755-763.
  • Cotte, J. (1997). Chances, trances, and lots of
    slots Gambling motives and consumption
    experiences. Journal of Leisure Research, 29(4),
    380.
  • Diskin, K. M., Hodgins, D. C. (1999). Narrowing
    of Attention and Dissociation in Pathological
    Video Lottery Gamblers. Journal of Gambling
    Studies, 15(1), 17-28.
  • Fantino, E., Navarro, A., O'Daly, M. (2005).
    The Science of Decision-making Behaviours
    Related to Gambling. International Gambling
    Studies, 5(2), 169-186.
  • Gillespie, M. A. M., Derevensky, J., Gupta, R.
    (2007). I. Adolescent problem gambling
    Developing a gambling expectancy instrument.
    Journal of Gambling Issues, 19, 51-68.
  • Lalander, P. (2006). Swedish machine gamblers
    from an ethnographic perspective. Journal of
    Gambling Issues (18), 73-90.
  • Larimer, M. E., Neighbors, C. (2003). Normative
    Misperception and the Impact of Descriptive and
    Injunctive Norms on College Student Gambling.
    Psychology of Addictive Behaviors, 17(3),
    235-243.
  • Lee, H. P., Chae, P. K., Lee, H. S., Kim, Y. K.
    (2007). The five-factor gambling motivation
    model. Psychiatry Research, 150(1), 21-32.
  • Lee, C. K., Lee, Y. K., Bernhard, B. J., Yoon,
    Y. S. (2006). Segmenting casino gamblers by
    motivation A cluster analysis of Korean
    gamblers. Tourism Management, 27(5), 856-866.
  • Mattson, R., MacKillop, J., Castelda, B.,
    Anderson, E., Donovick, P. (2008). The Factor
    Structure of Gambling-Related Cognitions in an
    Undergraduate University Sample. Journal of
    Psychopathology and Behavioral Assessment, 30(3),
    229-234.

20
References continued
  • Miller, N., Currie, S. (2008). A Canadian
    Population Level Analysis of the Roles of
    Irrational Gambling Cognitions and Risky Gambling
    Practices as Correlates of Gambling Intensity and
    Pathological Gambling. Journal of Gambling
    Studies, 24(3), 257-274.
  • Neighbors, C., Lostutter, T. W., Cronce, J. M.,
    Larimer, M. E. (2002). Exploring College Student
    Gambling Motivation. Journal of Gambling Studies,
    18(4), 361-370.
  • Neighbors, C., Lostutter, T., Whiteside, U.,
    Fossos, N., Walker, D., Larimer, M. (2007).
    Injunctive Norms and Problem Gambling among
    College Students. Journal of Gambling Studies,
    23(3), 259-273.
  • Ocean, G., Smith, G. J. (1993). Social reward,
    conflict, and commitment A theoretical model of
    gambling behavior. Journal of Gambling Studies,
    9(4), 321-339.
  • Pantalon, M., Maciejewski, P., Desai, R.,
    Potenza, M. (2008). Excitement-seeking Gambling
    in a Nationally Representative Sample of
    Recreational Gamblers. Journal of Gambling
    Studies, 24(1), 63-78.
  • Platz, L., Millar, M. (2001). Gambling in the
    context of other recreation activity A
    quantitative comparison of casual and
    pathological student gamblers. Journal of Leisure
    Research, 33(4), 383.
  • Ricketts, T., Macaskill, A. (2003). Gambling as
    emotion management developing a grounded theory
    of problem gambling. Addiction Research Theory,
    11(6), 383-400.
  • Rockloff, M., Dyer, V. (2006). The Four Es of
    Problem Gambling A Psychological Measure of
    Risk. Journal of Gambling Studies, 22(1),
    101-120.
  • Sharpe, L. (2004). Patterns of autonomic arousal
    in imaginal situations of winning and losing in
    problem gambling. Journal of Gambling Studies,
    20(1), 95-104.
  • Walters, G. D., Contri, D. (1998). Outcome
    Expectancies for Gambling Empirical Modeling of
    a Memory Network in Federal Prison Inmates.
    Journal of Gambling Studies, 14(2), 173-191.
  • Wood, R. T. A., Griffiths, M. D. (2007). A
    qualitative investigation of problem gambling as
    an escape-based coping strategy. Psychology
    Psychotherapy Theory, Research Practice,
    80(1), 107-125.

21
Acknowledgements
Amity Community Services Nicola Coalter
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