Offering an auto-play feature likely increases total gambling activity at online slot-machines: preliminary evidence from an interrupted time series experiment at a real-life online casino

Front Psychiatry. 2024 Feb 2:15:1340104. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2024.1340104. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Auto-play is a ubiquitous feature in online casino gambling and virtual slot machines especially, allowing gamblers to initiate spin sequences of pre-set length and value. While theoretical accounts diverge on the hypothesized causal effect on gambling behavior of using the auto-play feature, observational findings show that this feature is used to a higher degree by problem and/or high-intensity gamblers, suggesting that banning this feature may constitute a global responsible gambling measure. Direct, experimental research on causal effects of offering auto-play at online casinos is however lacking. Here, we report the findings of an interrupted time series experiment, conducted at a real-life online casino in Sweden, in which the auto-play feature was made available during a pre-set duration on 40 online slot machines, with 40 matched slots serving as control. Aggregated time series on daily betted amount, spins and net losses were analyzed using a structural Bayesian framework that compared observed developments during the peri-intervention period to modeled counterfactual estimates. Results suggest that offering an auto-play feature on online casinos likely increases total gambling activity in terms of betted amount (approx.+ 7-9%) and (perhaps) number of spins (approx. +3%) but has no effect on net losses. Limitations of studying auto-play effects on a population-level, as well as the complexities of banning this feature within a complex ecosystem of non-perfect channelization to licensed providers, are discussed, including suggestions for future research.

Keywords: auto-play; gambling; online casino; policy; time series.

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. The study was made possible by an industry-academia collaboration agreement that included partial funding by the gambling provider to Karolinska Institutet to cover personnel and publication costs. The funder was bound by this the agreement, that guaranteed full academic freedom. The funder had no role in analyzing data, interpretation of findings, or decision to submit for publication.