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Impulsivity in Pathological Gambling Blaszczynski et al. (1997)Blaszczynski et al. (1997) conducted a study to investigate the role of impulsivity and.

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Presentation on theme: "Impulsivity in Pathological Gambling Blaszczynski et al. (1997)Blaszczynski et al. (1997) conducted a study to investigate the role of impulsivity and."— Presentation transcript:

1 Impulsivity in Pathological Gambling Blaszczynski et al. (1997)Blaszczynski et al. (1997) conducted a study to investigate the role of impulsivity and other personality factors in pathological gamblers. In the model by Blaszczynski & Nower (2002), impulsivity is the principal component of Pathway 3 to pathological gambling.Blaszczynski & Nower (2002) Pathological gambling is classified as an Impulse Control Disorder in the DSM-IV (American Psychiatric Association) diagnostic taxonomy.gamblingDSM-IV Contributor© POSbase 2005

2 Impulsivity in Pathological Gambling Participants were 115 pathological gamblers seeking treatment, including 80 inpatients and 35 Gamblers Anonymous attenders (101 males and 14 females). The inpatients met the DSM-III (APA, 1980) diagnostic criteria for pathological gambling. © POSbase 2005

3 Impulsivity in Pathological Gambling The participants completed a battery of Psychological Measures:  DSM-III checklist for Antisocial Personality Disorder  Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) Beck Depression Inventory  Eysenck Impulsivity Scale (EIS), including subscales for Impulsiveness, Risk-taking, Non-planning, and Liveliness  California Psychological Inventory Socialization Subscale CPI So)  Eysenck Personality Questionnaire (EPQ), including the three dimensions Extroversion, Neuroticism and Psychoticism  Symptom Checklist 90 – Revised (SCL90-R)  Boredom Proneness (BP) © POSbase 2005

4 Impulsivity in Pathological Gambling In addition, the following demographic & psychosocial factors were measured:  Age  Years gambling  Gambling-related debt  Employment stability  Participation in criminal activity  Substance abuse  Psychometric indices of distress © POSbase 2005

5 Impulsivity in Pathological Gambling The gamblers’ scores on the psychological measures were compared to scores from normative populations. © POSbase 2005 The gamblers were significantly higher on:  Impulsiveness (EIS)  Non-planning (EIS)  Neuroticism (EPQ)  Psychoticism (EPQ)  Depression (mildly to moderately depressed) (BDI)  SCL90-R Positive Symptom Total  Boredom proneness (BP)

6 Impulsivity in Pathological Gambling Impulsivity scores from the Eysenck Impulsivity Scale were significantly correlated with:  Socialization (CPI So)r = -.59  Boredom proneness (BP)r =.57  Neuroticism (EPQ)r =.52  Psychoticism (EPQ)r =.47  Depression (BDI)r =.42  SCL90-R Positive Symptom Totalr =.36 © POSbase 2005

7 Impulsivity in Pathological Gambling Gamblers with a history of suicidal ideation had significantly higher Impulsivity scores and significantly lower Socialization scores than gamblers with no suicidal ideation history. © POSbase 2005 In addition, gamblers who had committed gambling-related offences had significantly higher Psychoticism scores than those who had not committed such offences.

8 Impulsivity in Pathological Gambling From the results of the study we can conclude that gamblers are more impulsive than the general population and that an impulsivity-antisocial construct might apply to pathological gambling. This construct has since been tested by Steel and Blaszczynski (1998).Steel and Blaszczynski (1998) A study by Alessi and Petry (2003) has shown that impulsivity, as measured by a Delay Discounting Task, is related to severity of gambling.Alessi and Petry (2003)Delay Discounting © POSbase 2005


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