| Literature DB >> 21853232 |
Lisham Ashrafioun1, Amy McCarthy, Harold Rosenberg.
Abstract
We recruited a sample of university student gamblers (n = 48) to complete a web-based battery of instruments in a study designed to assess the impact of imagery-based versus photographic cue exposure on acute craving to gamble using the multi-item Gambling Urge Scale (GUS; Raylu and Oei 2004). Although self-reported craving increased following both forms of cue exposure, the imagery script had a more pronounced impact than did examination of photographs of gambling-related stimuli. We also evaluated the association of the post-cue exposure GUS with other relevant measures, and found it correlated highly both with other questionnaires assessing craving to gamble and with other gambling-relevant characteristics (e.g., gambling-related problems, preoccupation with gambling, distorted gambling beliefs, gambling refusal self-efficacy, sensation seeking), but was not associated with social desirability bias. These findings support the use of the GUS-a brief multi-item scale that shows several key elements of construct, convergent, criterion and discriminant validity-to study the experience of craving in university student gamblers.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 21853232 DOI: 10.1007/s10899-011-9262-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gambl Stud ISSN: 1050-5350