When gambling, people tend to speed up after losses. This 'post-loss speeding' is in contrast with 'post-error slowing', which is often observed in behavioral tasks in experimental psychology. Importantly, participants can control the outcome in most behavioral tasks, but not in gambling tasks. To test whether perceived controllability over the outcome influences response speed after negative outcomes when gambling, we ran two online studies in which we created an illusion of control without changing the nature of the chance-determined gamble. Using the manipulation by Langer and Roth (1975), whose effect is replicated in Part I, we presented three groups of healthy participants (N = 600 per experiment, crowdsourced samples) with three diff...
Research on gambling near-misses has shown that objectively-equivalent outcomes can yield divergent ...
‘Near-miss' outcomes (i.e., unsuccessful outcomes close to the jackpot) have been shown to promote g...
abstract: There are two common cognitive distortions present in risky decision-making behavior. The ...
When gambling, people tend to speed up after losses. This ’post-loss speeding’ is in contrast with ’...
The illusion of control is an important feature of both problematic and nonproblematic gambling beha...
The illusion of control is an important feature of both problematic and nonproblematic gambling beha...
To investigate the response to suboptimal outcomes, Verbuggen et al. (Verbruggen F, Chambers CD, Law...
The tendency to continue or intensify gambling after losing (loss-chasing) is widely regarded as a d...
International audienceTwo experiments examined the relationships between the knowledge that another ...
The tendency to continue or intensify gambling after losing (loss-chasing) is widely regarded as a d...
Manipulating different behavioral characteristics of gambling games can potentially affect the exten...
Verbruggen, Chambers, Lawrence & McLaren (2017) recently challenged the view that individuals act wi...
In the present study, we examined the effect of wins and losses on impulsive action in gambling (Exp...
Abstract Two experiments examined the relationships between the knowledge that another person has wo...
peer reviewed'Near-miss' outcomes (i.e., unsuccessful outcomes close to the jackpot) have been shown...
Research on gambling near-misses has shown that objectively-equivalent outcomes can yield divergent ...
‘Near-miss' outcomes (i.e., unsuccessful outcomes close to the jackpot) have been shown to promote g...
abstract: There are two common cognitive distortions present in risky decision-making behavior. The ...
When gambling, people tend to speed up after losses. This ’post-loss speeding’ is in contrast with ’...
The illusion of control is an important feature of both problematic and nonproblematic gambling beha...
The illusion of control is an important feature of both problematic and nonproblematic gambling beha...
To investigate the response to suboptimal outcomes, Verbuggen et al. (Verbruggen F, Chambers CD, Law...
The tendency to continue or intensify gambling after losing (loss-chasing) is widely regarded as a d...
International audienceTwo experiments examined the relationships between the knowledge that another ...
The tendency to continue or intensify gambling after losing (loss-chasing) is widely regarded as a d...
Manipulating different behavioral characteristics of gambling games can potentially affect the exten...
Verbruggen, Chambers, Lawrence & McLaren (2017) recently challenged the view that individuals act wi...
In the present study, we examined the effect of wins and losses on impulsive action in gambling (Exp...
Abstract Two experiments examined the relationships between the knowledge that another person has wo...
peer reviewed'Near-miss' outcomes (i.e., unsuccessful outcomes close to the jackpot) have been shown...
Research on gambling near-misses has shown that objectively-equivalent outcomes can yield divergent ...
‘Near-miss' outcomes (i.e., unsuccessful outcomes close to the jackpot) have been shown to promote g...
abstract: There are two common cognitive distortions present in risky decision-making behavior. The ...