Gambling with Rose-Tinted Glasses on: Use of Emotion-Regulation Strategies Correlates with Dysfunctional Cognitions in Gambling Disorder Patients

J Behav Addict. 2016 Jun;5(2):271-81. doi: 10.1556/2006.5.2016.040.

Abstract

Background and aims Existing research shows that gambling disorder patients (GDPs) process gambling outcomes abnormally when compared against healthy controls (HCs). These anomalies present the form of exaggerated or distorted beliefs regarding the expected utility of outcomes and one's ability to predict or control gains and losses, as well as retrospective reinterpretations of what caused them. This study explores the possibility that the emotional regulation strategies GDPs use to cope with aversive events are linked to these cognitions. Methods 41 GDPs and 45 HCs, matched in sociodemographic variables, were assessed in gambling severity, emotion-regulation strategies (cognitive emotion-regulation questionnaire, CERQ), and gambling-related cognitions (gambling-related cognitions scale, GRCS). Results GDPs showed higher scores in all gambling-related cognition dimensions. Regarding emotion regulation, GDPs were observed to use self-blame and catastrophizing, but also positive refocusing, more often than controls. Additionally, in GDPs, putatively adaptive CERQ strategies shared a significant portion of variance with South Oaks gambling screen severity and GRCS beliefs. Shared variability was mostly attributable to the roles of refocusing on planning and putting into perspective at positively predicting severity and the interpretative bias (GDPs propensity to reframe losses in a more benign way), respectively. Discussion and conclusions Results show links between emotion-regulation strategies and problematic gambling-related behaviors and cognitions. The pattern of those links supports the idea that GDPs use emotion-regulation strategies, customarily regarded as adaptive, to cope with negative emotions, so that the motivational and cognitive processing of gambling outcomes becomes less effective in shaping gambling-related behavior.

Keywords: cognitive biases; emotion regulation; gambling disorder; gambling-related cognitions; metacognition.

MeSH terms

  • Adaptation, Psychological
  • Adult
  • Cognition*
  • Emotions
  • Gambling / complications
  • Gambling / psychology*
  • Gambling / rehabilitation
  • Humans
  • Multivariate Analysis
  • Psychiatric Status Rating Scales
  • Self-Control / psychology*
  • Severity of Illness Index
  • Socioeconomic Factors
  • Spain
  • Substance-Related Disorders / complications
  • Substance-Related Disorders / psychology

Grants and funding

Funding sources: Research described in this paper has been funded by a grant to the research team from the Spanish Government (Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad, Secretaría de Estado de Invetigación, Desarrollo e Innovación; Convocatoria 2013 de Proyectos I+D de Excelencia) with reference number PSI2013-45055. The first author has been awarded with an individual research grant (Ministerio de Educación, Cultura y Deporte, Programa FPU, reference number FP13/00669).