Cognitive theory

    Cards (6)

    • What is the expectancy theory?
      If gamblers expect benefits to outweight costs, addiction becomes more likely
    • Describe the cognitive theory for gambling addiction?
      • Assumption that irrational beliefs and distorted thinking patterns contribute to development and maintenance of problem gambling
      • These are cognitive biases
    • What are cognitive biases?
      Irrational beliefs that are unhelpful, unrealistic and inconsistent with social reality
    • Describe the 5 cognitive biases?
      1. Gamblers fallacy - faulty belief random events must even themselves out overtime
      2. Illusions of control- exaggerated self confidence in ability to 'beat the system' and influence chance
      3. Near miss bias - unsuccessful outcome is close to a win. 'Not constantly losing but constantly nearly win’
      4. Recall bias - remember and overestimate wins while forgetting about losses
      5. Ritual bias - believe they are lucky or engage in superstitious behaviours
    • Define the cognitive theory of gambling addiction?
      addicts have irrational beliefs about their ability to influence the outcome of random gambling events
    • What is likely to cause relapse and explain why?
      • Lack of self-efficacy
      • Addicts resume gamblinh as they do not believe they are capable of giving up
      • Relapse reinforces their lack of self-efficacy