2017
DOI: 10.1111/add.14071
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Luck, come here! Automatic approach tendencies toward gambling cues in moderate‐ to high‐risk gamblers

Abstract: In the Netherlands, relative to non-problem gamblers, moderate- to high-risk gamblers appear to have a stronger tendency to approach rather than to avoid gambling-related pictures compared with neutral ones. This gambling approach bias is associated concurrently with past-month gambling expenditure and duration of gambling and has been found to predict persistence in gambling behaviour over time.

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Cited by 27 publications
(18 citation statements)
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References 47 publications
(94 reference statements)
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“…Other possible sources of self-report biases among gamblers could be positive memory bias (not thinking about or reporting losses) (Boffo et al, 2018), or not fully understanding instructions on how to estimate theoretical constructs such as net expenditure or net losses. These issues, related to reporting gambling expenditures, were emphasized by several participants in the "think aloud" interviews and by many Delphi stakeholders.…”
Section: Preliminary Testing and Final Draft Versionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other possible sources of self-report biases among gamblers could be positive memory bias (not thinking about or reporting losses) (Boffo et al, 2018), or not fully understanding instructions on how to estimate theoretical constructs such as net expenditure or net losses. These issues, related to reporting gambling expenditures, were emphasized by several participants in the "think aloud" interviews and by many Delphi stakeholders.…”
Section: Preliminary Testing and Final Draft Versionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A first set of studies has been recently conducted to examine the role of gamblingrelated approach bias in Canadian and Dutch problem and non-problem gamblers, using an adapted version of the AAT with gambling stimuli tailored to participants' gambling preferences [100,101]. Results demonstrated the presence of approach bias toward gambling cues among Dutch gamblers with moderate-to-high severity of gambling problems, compared to non-problem gamblers [101], but not for Canadian problem gamblers [100]. Moreover, gambling approach bias predicted frequency and duration of prospective gambling episodes, over and above baseline neutral approach bias and gambling frequency and duration, respectively [101].…”
Section: Approach Bias Modificationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Applying this hypothesis to gambling disorder, craving, acting in tandem with attentional bias, increases the gambling-related stimuli's salience, which, in turn, steers attention and its biases. The automatic processing of these stimuli hampers the detection of others (Kastnern et al, 1998) and drives gambling behaviors (Boffo et al, 2018), contributing to the severity of addiction Berridge, 1993, 2008).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%