Science News: Gambling is addictive

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  • Justin7
    SBR Hall of Famer
    • 07-31-06
    • 8577

    #1
    Science News: Gambling is addictive
    For gamblers' brains, almost counts
    Near-misses activate the same reward circuitry as jackpots
    By Laura Sanders
    Web edition : Wednesday, February 11th, 2009
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    NEAR-MISSThe computer display shown here caused subjects to experience a near-miss, because the banana on the second reel stopped one position too far.Luke Clark, et al., Neuron, February 12, 2009

    Close only counts in horseshoes and hand grenades, some say. But to the gambling brain, almost hitting the slot machine jackpot may be just as good as actually winning, a study appearing in the Feb. 12 Neuron suggests. The results may help explain gambling’s allure.
    “This is a very elegant study,” comments Marc Potenza, an addiction psychiatrist at Yale University. “From a public health and clinical perspective, this is very important.”
    When all three cherries hit the payline and money pours out of a slot machine, select regions of the brain activate. Called the reward pathway, brain cells in these regions signal pleasure by releasing and detecting the feel-good chemical messenger dopamine. “Those same areas are recruited by natural rewards, like chocolate, and by drugs of abuse, like cocaine,” explains coauthor of the study Luke Clark, of the University of Cambridge in England.
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    BRAIN ON NEAR-MISSBrains in people who almost won (bottom row) had activation in similar regions of the reward pathway as people who won (top row).Luke Clark, et al., Neuron, February 12, 2009

    It turns out the same brain areas probably activate when only two out of three cherries hit the payline.
    Clark and his colleagues wanted to understand why a person will keep feeding money into the slot machine, even though the house usually wins. The researchers turned to gamblers who nearly won, but didn’t. “The near-miss is quite a paradoxical event,” Clark says. Gamblers who almost win put “their head down in their hands — they can’t believe it. And then the next thing they do is place another bet.”
    In the experiment, gamblers won 50 pence (about 75 cents) each time two icons on reels aligned on a computer monitor resembling a slot machine. Subjects won no money if the icons almost lined up. Using the brain-imaging technique called fMRI, the researchers found that the same reward pathway in the brain activates with a near-miss as activates with a win.
    Subjects reported near-misses as highly unpleasant experiences, but also that the near-misses made them want to gamble more. Interestingly, this effect was stronger when players thought they were able to control the gambling game by choosing which icons appeared in the reel. When the computer chose the icons, the effect diminished, highlighting the importance of feelings of control, the team reports.
    Being rewarded for almost winning is likely useful in some situations, Clark says. For some tasks, such as learning to kick a soccer ball into a goal or firing an arrow at a target, near-misses are informative. “You’re acquiring the skill, and the brain should pay attention to near-misses,” Clark says.
    But in gambling, almost winning has no effect on the next pull of the lever or roll of the dice. “Games of chance tell you nothing about future success,” he says. So it seems gambling has somehow hijacked the brain’s reward system. The finding could help in understanding brain pathways that lead to gambling addiction.
    The researchers are currently studying the brains of problem gamblers to see whether near-misses activate the same pathway to a greater extent.
  • MonkeyF0cker
    SBR Posting Legend
    • 06-12-07
    • 12144

    #2
    I thought that was common sense. It's funny when you live in Vegas. You don't know how many people I hear when I pass by the slots say, "Oh! Almost!" I just think to myself, "Dummy. Don't you know the machines are programmed to do that?"
    Comment
    • poker_dummy101
      Restricted User
      • 11-03-08
      • 6395

      #3
      Originally posted by MonkeyF0cker
      "Dummy. Don't you know the machines are programmed to do that?"

      Why do you call yourself my name?
      Comment
      • MonkeyF0cker
        SBR Posting Legend
        • 06-12-07
        • 12144

        #4
        I've actually met people that live here say, "Oh. It's coming.", after a near miss of the jackpot. You just have to shake your head. Most people don't have any clue how the machines actually work.
        Comment
        • InTheHole
          SBR Posting Legend
          • 04-28-08
          • 15243

          #5
          good shit
          Comment
          • Justin7
            SBR Hall of Famer
            • 07-31-06
            • 8577

            #6
            I just finished my "tax preparation" before sending it to my attorney. In the last year, I've spent about 5k on various subscriptions and individual books. It's deductible if you declare your winnings
            Comment
            • RogueJuror
              SBR Posting Legend
              • 07-08-08
              • 10010

              #7
              Originally posted by MonkeyF0cker
              I've actually met people that live here say, "Oh. It's coming.", after a near miss of the jackpot. You just have to shake your head. Most people don't have any clue how the machines actually work.
              Not just gambling but in all walks of life, man most people are idiots.

              Comment
              • Chi_archie
                SBR Aristocracy
                • 07-22-08
                • 63172

                #8
                good stuff....
                Comment
                • fiveteamer
                  SBR Posting Legend
                  • 04-14-08
                  • 10805

                  #9
                  Gambling is addictive, Bread has a huge cock, fiveteamer is rad. What else is new?
                  Comment
                  • Chi_archie
                    SBR Aristocracy
                    • 07-22-08
                    • 63172

                    #10
                    Originally posted by fiveteamer
                    Gambling is addictive, Bread has a huge cock, fiveteamer is rad. What else is new?

                    how big?

                    just curious.....
                    Comment
                    • Iwinyourmoney
                      SBR Posting Legend
                      • 04-18-07
                      • 18368

                      #11
                      I dont need a fancy article to tell me Im hooked on this shit
                      Comment
                      • Bread
                        SBR Posting Legend
                        • 03-16-08
                        • 23726

                        #12
                        Near misses don't get me almost as excited as winning.

                        Take Syracuse last night...losing by 14. I'm getting 12. Time running down...some 8 foot jerkoff for 'Cuse misses a monster jam for the push. Guy was wide open.

                        That was a near push. I then broke my remote. I did not feel any sense of a positive rush at all for coming "this close".

                        But yea, I get it.
                        Comment
                        • Sforz
                          SBR MVP
                          • 08-07-08
                          • 2221

                          #13
                          so would a near-miss in sports betting be like Kobe missing a 3pter at the end of the game to cover the spread?

                          If so, then where is the pattern associated with that? I see how this works in slot machines, but how does it translate to sports betting?
                          Comment
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