The associative learning roots of affect-driven impulsivity and its role in problem gambling: A replication attempt and extension of Quintero et al. (2020)
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteEditorial
Akadémiai Kiadó
Materia
Emotion regulation Positive urgency Negative urgency Gambling Craving Predictive learning task
Date
2023-03-23Referencia bibliográfica
Muela, I., Ventura-Lucena, J. M., Navas, J. F., & Perales, J. C. (2023). The associative learning roots of affect-driven impulsivity and its role in problem gambling: A replication attempt and extension of Quintero et al.(2020). Journal of Behavioral Addictions, 12(1), 201-218.[https://doi.org/10.1556/2006.2023.00009]
Patrocinador
Spanish Government PSI2017-85488-P; Spanish Government (Convocatoria 2017 de Proyectos ID de Excelencia, Spain); Spanish Government (Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional, FEDER, European Union); Spanish Government (Agencia Espanola de Investigacion, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion) (MCIN/AEI) PID2020-116535 GB-I00; Spanish Government PRE2018-085150Résumé
Background and aims: Negative/positive urgency (NU/PU) refers to the proneness to act rashly under
negative/positive emotions. These traits are proxies to generalized emotion dysregulation, and are wellestablished
predictors of gambling-related problems. We aimed to replicate a previous work (Quintero
et al., 2020) showing NU to be related to faulty extinction of conditioned stimuli in an emotional conditioning
task, to extend these findings to PU, and to clarify the role of urgency in the development of
gambling-related craving and problems. Methods: 81 gamblers performed an acquisition-extinction task in
which neutral, disgusting, erotic and gambling-related images were used as unconditioned stimuli (US),
and color patches as conditioned stimuli (CS). Trial-by-trial predictive responses were analyzed using
generalized linear mixed-effects models (GLME). Results: PU was more strongly related than NU to
craving and severity of gambling problems. PU did not influence acquisition in the associative task,
whereas NU slightly slowed it. Extinction was hampered in individuals with high PU, and a follow-up
analysis showed this effect to depend on relative preference for skill-based and casino games. Discussion
and conclusions: Results suggest that resistance to extinction of emotionally conditioned cues is a sign of
malfunctioning emotion regulation in problematic gambling. In our work, the key effect was driven by PU
(instead of NU), and gambling craving and symptoms were also more closely predicted by it. Future
research should compare the involvement of PU and NU in emotion regulation and gambling problems,
for gamblers with preference for different gambling modalities (e.g., pure chance vs skill games)