Gambling and Alcohol

Standard

Gambling and Alcohol : How Alcohol Myopia affects Gambling Behavior. / Keim, Rebecca.

1 ed. Deutschland : AV Akademikerverlag, 2014. 60 p.

Research output: Book/anthologyMonographs

Harvard

Keim, R 2014, Gambling and Alcohol: How Alcohol Myopia affects Gambling Behavior. vol. 1, 1 edn, AV Akademikerverlag, Deutschland.

APA

Keim, R. (2014). Gambling and Alcohol: How Alcohol Myopia affects Gambling Behavior. (1 ed.) AV Akademikerverlag.

Vancouver

Keim R. Gambling and Alcohol: How Alcohol Myopia affects Gambling Behavior. 1 ed. Deutschland: AV Akademikerverlag, 2014. 60 p.

Bibtex

@book{c52a4963427043fda738ba78af4b734a,
title = "Gambling and Alcohol: How Alcohol Myopia affects Gambling Behavior",
abstract = "Alcohol Myopia theory (Steele & Josephs, 1990) states that the behavior of intoxicated individuals is disproportionally influenced by the most salient cues in a given situation. Alcohol leads to higher goal commitment if the desirability is salient, despite low chances of success (Sevincer & Oettingen, 2009). The reverse is true if low chances are made salient (Sevincer, Oettingen, & Lerner, 2012). We wanted to explore if the difference between the effects of alcohol intoxication and a placebo on gambling persistence could depend on the salience of the potential high jackpots and the low chances of attaining those. Furthermore, this study set out to test if peoples' dispositional sensitivity to reward should influence gamblers persistence. Intoxicated subjects (vs. sober) filled out a BIS/BAS-scale (Carver & White, 1994) and performed a gambling task. Those primed with a salient low winning chance played significantly less trials than equivalently primed sober persons. We did not find an effect of reward sensitivity. The results have practical implications for reducing gambling behavior under the influence of alcohol.",
author = "Rebecca Keim",
year = "2014",
month = oct,
day = "19",
language = "English",
isbn = "9783639677409",
volume = "1",
publisher = "AV Akademikerverlag",
edition = "1",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - Gambling and Alcohol

T2 - How Alcohol Myopia affects Gambling Behavior

AU - Keim, Rebecca

PY - 2014/10/19

Y1 - 2014/10/19

N2 - Alcohol Myopia theory (Steele & Josephs, 1990) states that the behavior of intoxicated individuals is disproportionally influenced by the most salient cues in a given situation. Alcohol leads to higher goal commitment if the desirability is salient, despite low chances of success (Sevincer & Oettingen, 2009). The reverse is true if low chances are made salient (Sevincer, Oettingen, & Lerner, 2012). We wanted to explore if the difference between the effects of alcohol intoxication and a placebo on gambling persistence could depend on the salience of the potential high jackpots and the low chances of attaining those. Furthermore, this study set out to test if peoples' dispositional sensitivity to reward should influence gamblers persistence. Intoxicated subjects (vs. sober) filled out a BIS/BAS-scale (Carver & White, 1994) and performed a gambling task. Those primed with a salient low winning chance played significantly less trials than equivalently primed sober persons. We did not find an effect of reward sensitivity. The results have practical implications for reducing gambling behavior under the influence of alcohol.

AB - Alcohol Myopia theory (Steele & Josephs, 1990) states that the behavior of intoxicated individuals is disproportionally influenced by the most salient cues in a given situation. Alcohol leads to higher goal commitment if the desirability is salient, despite low chances of success (Sevincer & Oettingen, 2009). The reverse is true if low chances are made salient (Sevincer, Oettingen, & Lerner, 2012). We wanted to explore if the difference between the effects of alcohol intoxication and a placebo on gambling persistence could depend on the salience of the potential high jackpots and the low chances of attaining those. Furthermore, this study set out to test if peoples' dispositional sensitivity to reward should influence gamblers persistence. Intoxicated subjects (vs. sober) filled out a BIS/BAS-scale (Carver & White, 1994) and performed a gambling task. Those primed with a salient low winning chance played significantly less trials than equivalently primed sober persons. We did not find an effect of reward sensitivity. The results have practical implications for reducing gambling behavior under the influence of alcohol.

M3 - Monographs

SN - 9783639677409

VL - 1

BT - Gambling and Alcohol

PB - AV Akademikerverlag

CY - Deutschland

ER -