Browsing by Subject "Gambling -- Economic aspects"
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- ItemHate the Game… Not the Player: A Statistical Analysis of the Characteristics of Pathological Gambling(2005) Stennis, Cartier; Bell, Linda A., 1959-The purpose of this thesis is to examine the determinants of pathological gambling, in particular, the relationship, if any, between gaming activities and gambling behavior. The significance of this topic derives from the rapid growth of the gaming industry and the assertion by Walker (1996) that poker, blackjack, and bridge players are the minorities within Gamblers Anonymous, because the games they play require a real element of skill. A better understanding, therefore, of the determinants of pathological gambling might help dictate how legislation can preserve gambling as a controlled form of entertainment and simultaneously limit or eliminate its negative social and economic effects.
- ItemWill People who Choose to Gamble their Money Also Choose to Gamble with their Health?(2009) Koelmel, Elizabeth C.; Owens, David M.This paper investigates the consistency with which people exhibit chance-taking behavior. By looking at the relationship between individuals’ gambling choices and their choices regarding fast-food consumption, junk-food consumption, exercise habits, video-game and computer-game playing, as well as choices regarding other entertainment options (such as movie-watching tendencies), this paper looks at whether or not people who gamble with their money will also gamble with their health by eating unhealthily and leading an inactive (or sedentary) lifestyle. Generally speaking, this paper finds that gamblers tend to exhibit chance-taking behavior when making decisions that relate to their health. This study does not establish a causal relationship (i.e. if an individual gambles, he or she will make more unhealthy choices), but it is able to find evidence for a significant and revealing relationship between gambling choices and choices relating to one's health that can lead one to conclude that--holding all other factors constant--those who gamble, and especially those who gamble seriously, are more likely to make choices regarding food consumption and lifestyle habits that could negatively affect their health. Such a finding lends itself to support the notion that there is the potential to believe that there is a degree of consistency with which people express chance-taking behavior when considering certain financial and health choices. At the very least, the findings in this study hold value for their real-life applicability.