Eyes on the Prize: Eye-Tracking Evidence of Attentional Biases Toward Gambling and Natural Rewards
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Sánchez-Fernández, Francisco-Luis; Viedma Del Jesús, María Isabel; Ibáñez Zapata, José Ángel; Sánchez Fernández, Juan; Montoro Ríos, Francisco JavierEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Gambling disorder Attentional bias Eye-tracking
Fecha
2025Referencia bibliográfica
Published version: Sánchez-Fernández, F. L., Viedma-del-Jesus, M. I., Ibáñez-Zapata, J. Á., Sánchez-Fernández, J., & Montoro-Ríos, F. J. (2025). Eyes on the prize: Eye-tracking evidence of attentional biases toward gambling and natural rewards. International Journal of Psychophysiology, 113245. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpsycho.2025.113245
Patrocinador
Spanish Ministry of Consumption (SUBV23/00008)Resumen
The present study investigates attentional biases (ABs) in gamblers and non-gamblers, focusing on both
gambling-related and food-related stimuli to examine the relationship between these biases and the Incentive
Sensitization (IS) and Reward Deficiency Syndrome (RDS) models of addiction. Using an eye-tracking methodology, we assess how ABs differ across three conditions involving two types of images: Food vs. Gambling, Food
vs. Neutral, and Gambling vs. Neutral. Gamblers showed a significant AB toward gambling-related stimuli
compared to neutral cues, supporting the IS model. However, when gambling and food images were compared,
no significant difference in AB was found, partially disconfirming the hypothesis that gamblers exhibit a stronger
bias toward gambling stimuli. In contrast, non-gamblers demonstrated a clear preference for food-related images,
as predicted by the IS model. Additionally, group differences revealed that gamblers allocated more attention to
gambling-related cues than non-gamblers. However, food images elicited similar levels of attention from both
gamblers and non-gamblers when compared to neutral images, rather than gambling-related images. These
findings highlight the role of ABs in the development and maintenance of gambling behaviour, supporting the IS
model but not the RDS model. The study also explores the association between AB and severity of gambling and
other relevant psychological factors in gambling disorder, providing new insights into the cognitive mechanisms
underlying gambling addiction. These results suggest that ABs could be targeted in interventions aimed at
modifying attention patterns and reducing gambling-related cravings.





