Impact of online poker gambling on behavioural and neurophysiological responses to a virtual gambling task

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Abstract

Online poker gambling (OPG) involves various executive control processes and emotion regulation. In this context, we hypothesized that online poker players, accustomed to handling virtual cards, would show high performance on computerized decision-making tasks such as the Iowa Gambling Task (IGT). Using press advertisements, we recruited a non-gambler group (NG; n = 20) and an OPG group (n = 22). All participants performed the IGT while their cerebral activity was recorded by electroencephalography. Compared with the OPG group, the NG group showed significantly better progression in the IGT in the last trials. Recording of brain activity revealed the appearance of a temporal map between 150 and 175 ms specific to the gain condition in both groups. A second map was observed at 215–295 ms specifically in the NG group, and the generators were identified in the occipital regions. This activity is indicative of a high level of visual awareness; thus, it reflects additional processing of visual information, which can be assumed to be induced by the lower exposure of the NGs to online card games. We hypothesize that the absence of this activity in the OPG group might be due to their online habituation to virtual environments.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Giustiniani, J., Nicolier, M., Diwoux, A., Chabin, T., Pazart, L., Haffen, E., & Gabriel, D. (2024). Impact of online poker gambling on behavioural and neurophysiological responses to a virtual gambling task. Addiction Biology, 29(2). https://doi.org/10.1111/adb.13373

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