Neurocognitive and clinical correlates of gambling behavior based on mode of gambling
Neurocognitive and clinical correlates of gambling behavior based on mode of gambling
Background: gambling opportunities have expanded greatly in recent years, with ever-increasing availability via the internet as well as land-based options (eg, casinos). Although some research suggests that internet gamblers have higher rates of disordered gambling than land-based only gamblers, the clinical and cognitive importance of these findings is unknown.
Methods: we recruited 542 young adults (age 18 to 29) and compared land- based only (n = 385 [70.8%]) and mixed internet/land-based gamblers (LBGs) (n = 157 [28.9%]) on clinical and cognitive measures (gambling behavior, other potentially addictive behaviors, psychiatric comorbidity, self-report measures of impulsivity, and neurocognitive functioning).
Results: mixed internet/LBGs were more likely to be disordered gamblers and have worse gambling urges and behaviors, more depressive symptoms, and greater rates of internet addiction; these differences were of medium to large effect size. The 2 groups did not exhibit any significant differences on cognitive tasks assessing cognitive flexibility, motor impulsivity, or spatial working memory.
Conclusions: this research suggests that mixed internet/LBGs and land-based only gamblers differ on important clinical features but not in terms of neuropsychological functioning. Whether subtyping based on mode of gambling could have utility for treatment interventions awaits future research.
232-238
Leppink, Eric W.
61a0a712-e471-49fb-99b6-12dc64c7d372
Blum, Austin W.
3e05da03-caff-4102-9df9-3466c14630ba
Chamberlain, Samuel
8a0e09e6-f51f-4039-9287-88debe8d8b6f
Grant, Jon E.
07372bd5-8a0d-42b4-b41b-e376c652acf3
1 November 2016
Leppink, Eric W.
61a0a712-e471-49fb-99b6-12dc64c7d372
Blum, Austin W.
3e05da03-caff-4102-9df9-3466c14630ba
Chamberlain, Samuel
8a0e09e6-f51f-4039-9287-88debe8d8b6f
Grant, Jon E.
07372bd5-8a0d-42b4-b41b-e376c652acf3
Leppink, Eric W., Blum, Austin W., Chamberlain, Samuel and Grant, Jon E.
(2016)
Neurocognitive and clinical correlates of gambling behavior based on mode of gambling.
Annals of clinical psychiatry : official journal of the American Academy of Clinical Psychiatrists, 28 (4), .
Abstract
Background: gambling opportunities have expanded greatly in recent years, with ever-increasing availability via the internet as well as land-based options (eg, casinos). Although some research suggests that internet gamblers have higher rates of disordered gambling than land-based only gamblers, the clinical and cognitive importance of these findings is unknown.
Methods: we recruited 542 young adults (age 18 to 29) and compared land- based only (n = 385 [70.8%]) and mixed internet/land-based gamblers (LBGs) (n = 157 [28.9%]) on clinical and cognitive measures (gambling behavior, other potentially addictive behaviors, psychiatric comorbidity, self-report measures of impulsivity, and neurocognitive functioning).
Results: mixed internet/LBGs were more likely to be disordered gamblers and have worse gambling urges and behaviors, more depressive symptoms, and greater rates of internet addiction; these differences were of medium to large effect size. The 2 groups did not exhibit any significant differences on cognitive tasks assessing cognitive flexibility, motor impulsivity, or spatial working memory.
Conclusions: this research suggests that mixed internet/LBGs and land-based only gamblers differ on important clinical features but not in terms of neuropsychological functioning. Whether subtyping based on mode of gambling could have utility for treatment interventions awaits future research.
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Published date: 1 November 2016
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Local EPrints ID: 493000
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/493000
ISSN: 1040-1237
PURE UUID: 51c7a993-7d20-4508-abef-49b3f884459e
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Date deposited: 21 Aug 2024 17:12
Last modified: 30 Aug 2024 02:00
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Contributors
Author:
Eric W. Leppink
Author:
Austin W. Blum
Author:
Samuel Chamberlain
Author:
Jon E. Grant
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