Search Swinburne Research Bank
Home
List of Titles
Gaming machine addiction: the role of avoidance, accessibility and social support
List of Titles
Gaming machine addiction: the role of avoidance, accessibility and social support
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.3/204289
- Title
- Gaming machine addiction: the role of avoidance, accessibility and social support
- Author(s)
- Thomas, Anna C.; Allen, Felicity L.; Phillips, James; Karantzas, Gery
- Abstract
- Commonality in etiology and clinical expression plus high comorbidity between pathological gambling and substance use disorders suggest common underlying motives. It is important to understand common motivators and differentiating factors. An overarching framework of addiction was used to examine predictors of problem gambling in current electronic gaming machine (EGM) gamblers. Path analysis was used to examine the relationships between antecedent factors (stressors, coping habits, social support), gambling motivations (avoidance, accessibility, social) and gambling behavior. Three hundred and forty seven (229 females: M = 29.20 years, SD = 14.93; 118 males: M = 29.64 years, SD = 12.49) people participated. Consistent with stress, coping and addiction theory, situational life stressors and general avoidance coping were positively related to avoidance-motivated gambling. In turn, avoidance-motivated gambling was positively related to EGM gambling frequency and problems. Consistent with exposure theory, life stressors were positively related to accessibility-motivated gambling, and accessibility-motivated gambling was positively related to EGM gambling frequency and gambling problems. These findings are consistent with other addiction research and suggest avoidance-motivated gambling is part of a more generalized pattern of avoidance coping with relative accessibility to EGM gambling explaining its choice as a method of avoidance. Findings also showed social support acted as a direct protective factor in relation to gambling frequency and problems and indirectly via avoidance and accessibility gambling motivations. Finally, life stressors were positively related to socially motivated gambling but this motivation was not related to either social support or gambling behavior suggesting it has little direct influence on gambling problems.
- Publication type
- Journal article
- Research centre
- Swinburne University of Technology
- Source
- Psychology of Addictive Behaviors, Vol. 25, no. 4 (Dec 2011), pp. 738-744
- Publication year
- 2011
- FOR Code(s)
- 1701 Psychology
- Keyword(s)
- Addiction; Electronic gaming; Gaming machines; Pathological gambling; Problem gambling; Socail support
- Publisher
- American Psychological Association
- ISSN
- 0893-164X
- Publisher URL
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/a0024865
- Copyright
- Copyright © 2011 American Psychological Association.
- Peer reviewed


