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Age of gambling onset and resultant gambling behavior during young adulthood in the United States

Age of gambling onset and resultant gambling behavior during young adulthood in the United States
Age of gambling onset and resultant gambling behavior during young adulthood in the United States
Background and Objectives: Previous research has examined how the age at which an individual first gambles (age of gambling onset) correlates with problematic behavior later in life, such as problematic alcohol or substance use; however, much less is known about how age of gambling onset, particularly as a child or as a young adult, might influence future gambling. We assessed how self-reported age of gambling onset may have shaped more recent gambling and propensity to take risks.

Methods: We analyzed questionnaire data and neurocognitive assessment data collected from young adults in the United States (n = 579) and conducted ordinal logistic regression to model our study variables.

Results: Upon examining three distinct age categories (under 18, 18–20, 21, and over), we found that earlier age of gambling onset was significantly associated with betting a higher overall proportion during a neurocognitive task.

Conclusions and Scientific Significance: Gambling more points on a laboratory-based task was correlated to earlier age of gambling onset. There were no statistically significant associations between age of gambling onset and severity of recent pathological gambling, nor gambling expenditure in the past year, nor gambling frequency in the past week. Future longitudinal study should discern the causality of these findings in both directions and ascertain whether these findings can be extended to older and clinical populations. Future work should explore other variables, such as ethnicity and socioeconomic background, that may be relevant to understanding variations in age of gambling onset and its repercussions.

Addiction, Adolescents, Age of gambling onset, Gambling, Neurocognitive assessment, Young adults
1055-0496
Quinn, Anthony
22828980-92eb-4953-bab6-9fd7104ab278
Chamberlain, Samuel R.
8a0e09e6-f51f-4039-9287-88debe8d8b6f
Grant, Jon E.
07372bd5-8a0d-42b4-b41b-e376c652acf3
Quinn, Anthony
22828980-92eb-4953-bab6-9fd7104ab278
Chamberlain, Samuel R.
8a0e09e6-f51f-4039-9287-88debe8d8b6f
Grant, Jon E.
07372bd5-8a0d-42b4-b41b-e376c652acf3

Quinn, Anthony, Chamberlain, Samuel R. and Grant, Jon E. (2022) Age of gambling onset and resultant gambling behavior during young adulthood in the United States. The American Journal on Addictions. (doi:10.1111/ajad.13368).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background and Objectives: Previous research has examined how the age at which an individual first gambles (age of gambling onset) correlates with problematic behavior later in life, such as problematic alcohol or substance use; however, much less is known about how age of gambling onset, particularly as a child or as a young adult, might influence future gambling. We assessed how self-reported age of gambling onset may have shaped more recent gambling and propensity to take risks.

Methods: We analyzed questionnaire data and neurocognitive assessment data collected from young adults in the United States (n = 579) and conducted ordinal logistic regression to model our study variables.

Results: Upon examining three distinct age categories (under 18, 18–20, 21, and over), we found that earlier age of gambling onset was significantly associated with betting a higher overall proportion during a neurocognitive task.

Conclusions and Scientific Significance: Gambling more points on a laboratory-based task was correlated to earlier age of gambling onset. There were no statistically significant associations between age of gambling onset and severity of recent pathological gambling, nor gambling expenditure in the past year, nor gambling frequency in the past week. Future longitudinal study should discern the causality of these findings in both directions and ascertain whether these findings can be extended to older and clinical populations. Future work should explore other variables, such as ethnicity and socioeconomic background, that may be relevant to understanding variations in age of gambling onset and its repercussions.

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American J Addict - 2022 - Quinn - Version of Record
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 7 December 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 22 December 2022
Additional Information: Funding information: Wellcome Trust, Grant/Award Number: 110049/Z/15/Z & 110049/Z/15/A; National Center for Responsible Gaming. For the purpose of open access, the author has applied a CC BY public copyright licence to any Author Accepted Manuscript version arising from this submission.
Keywords: Addiction, Adolescents, Age of gambling onset, Gambling, Neurocognitive assessment, Young adults

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 474389
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/474389
ISSN: 1055-0496
PURE UUID: 983b7ea9-7939-4217-8056-7b2dfdf9c0bc
ORCID for Anthony Quinn: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4245-1996
ORCID for Samuel R. Chamberlain: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7014-8121

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Date deposited: 21 Feb 2023 17:41
Last modified: 30 Aug 2024 02:00

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Contributors

Author: Anthony Quinn ORCID iD
Author: Samuel R. Chamberlain ORCID iD
Author: Jon E. Grant

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