| Literature DB >> 29572666 |
En Li1, Erika Langham2, Matthew Browne3, Matthew Rockloff3, Hannah Thorne4.
Abstract
This study examined whether an implicit association existed between gambling and sport among underage youth in Australia, and whether this implicit association could shape their explicit intention to gamble. A sample of 14-17 year old Australian participants completed two phases of tasks, including an implicit association test based online experiment, and a post-experiment online survey. The results supported the existence of an implicit association between gambling and sport among the participants. This implicit association became stronger when they saw sport-relevant (vs. sport-irrelevant) gambling logos, or gambling-relevant (vs. gambling-irrelevant) sport names. In addition, this implicit association was positively related to the amount of sport viewing, but only among those participants who had more favorable gambling attitudes. Lastly, gambling attitudes and advertising knowledge, rather than the implicit association, turned out to be significant predictors of the explicit intention to gamble.Entities:
Keywords: Advertising knowledge; Explicit intention; Gambling; Gambling attitudes; Implicit association; Sport
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29572666 DOI: 10.1007/s10899-018-9756-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gambl Stud ISSN: 1050-5350