Author ORCID Identifier
Semester
Fall
Date of Graduation
2024
Document Type
Thesis
Degree Type
MS
College
Eberly College of Arts and Sciences
Department
Psychology
Committee Chair
Karen Anderson
Committee Member
Mariya Cherkasova
Committee Member
Michael Perone
Abstract
Problem gambling, or Gambling Disorder, is a behavioral disorder that affects 2.5% of the U.S. population and can result in detriments to physical, mental, and financial well-being. Electronic gambling machines (e.g., slot machines, video poker, pachinko) may be more addictive than other forms of gambling (e.g., table games, sports betting). Electronic gambling machines present a series of audiovisual stimuli concurrently with winning and some losing outcomes. Previous research in human and non-human animals has found increased levels of risky choice when audiovisual stimuli are presented with wins compared to their absence. The present study was arranged to evaluate how a visual stimulus paired with winning outcomes, and presented on some losing outcomes, would influence risky choice in rats using a probability-discounting paradigm. A choice between a smaller, certain outcome and a larger, uncertain outcome (with changing probabilities) was presented. A choice for the larger, uncertain outcome was deemed the “risky choice.” A visual cue was always presented with winning outcomes and was systematically implemented on a proportion of outcomes where a choice was made for the uncertain alternative, but no food reinforcement was delivered. Increases in risky choice were found when the win-associated stimulus was presented on half of all losing outcomes, relative to when it was omitted. Increases in risky choice were observable when choice was between relatively equal value choices and when the value of the smaller, certain alternative was only slightly higher than that of the larger, uncertain alternative. Risky choices were also more likely following a losing trial with the presentation of the win-paired cue than following a win or a loss without the win-paired cue. Implications in electronic gambling machines are discussed.
Recommended Citation
Lambert, Connor M., "Effects of Probabilistic Win-Paired-Cue Delivery on Loss Trials on Risky Choice in Rats" (2024). Graduate Theses, Dissertations, and Problem Reports. 12693.
https://researchrepository.wvu.edu/etd/12693