HARVARD STUDY: RISK OF ADDICTION IS LOW IN ONLINE
POKER
24 April 2009
Internet gamers are more likely to regulate
betting; less likely to become addicted
Internet gambling opponents who use the argument that
Internet gambling is especially addictive had a setback
this week with the release of news from a recent Harvard
study.
The respected daily college newspaper,
The Harvard Crimson, reported that the study was
conducted by the Harvard Medical School Division on
Addictions and suggests that the widespread availability
of Internet gambling has not led to an increase in the
number of people addicted to gambling.
The study
actually found that gamblers who visit gaming Web sites
are more likely to self-regulate their betting behaviour
based on their pattern of wins and losses, the newspaper
informed. Those who are addicted to gambling do not
exhibit such control.
Working with the major
European Internet gambling group Bwin with access to
substantial data, the Division began its extensive study
in February 2005 with a survey of 3 445 voluntary Bwin
members. The participants’ outcomes were analysed over
the course of two years, and the number of chips they
bought and sold per session was tallied.
The
study specifically investigated online gambling as “a
potential object of addictive behavior,” and concluded
that the availability of Internet gambling is not
correlated to gambling addiction.
“The very
first thing we learned, which we didn’t expect, was that
the vast majority, the overwhelming majority, of
gamblers online gamble in a very moderate and mild way,”
said HMS Associate Professor of Psychology Howard
Shaffer regarding the study.
He revealed that
approximately 95 percent of the players studied only
bought a median of about $15.65 in chips at two poker
sessions per week.
“A minority of players did
not show such moderation,” the study noted, commenting
that around 5 percent of the respondents bet in excess
of the norm, buying a median of $116.13 in chips at 10
sessions per week.
The study additionally showed
that the percentage of American problem gamblers has
barely changed since the 1970s, hovering around 0.6
percent of the United States population.
Andrew
M. Woods, the executive director of Harvard Law School’s
Global Poker Strategic Thinking Society, said he did not
find the results of the study surprising, adding that
poker is less like gambling and more like “risk
assessment.”
According to Woods, other casino
games, such as blackjack, have a built-in advantage
towards the house, making it less likely for players to
win money.
“There is no house in poker, so no
one is guaranteed to win,” Woods said.
“Poker
exercises your ability to make good decisions,” he said,
reflecting on the mild betting habits of online players.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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