All My Friends Are Doing It: Perceived Social Norms Predict Heavier Sports Betting Behavior Among Young Adults.

Joseph Lambuth, Arvin Shaygan, Ty W Lostutter, Scott Graupensperger
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Abstract

Sports betting is the fastest growing gambling behavior in the United States, particularly among young adults. Despite burgeoning evidence of the public health concerns associated with sports betting, antecedents of this addictive behavior are largely understudied. Informed by seminal psychological theories of conformity and existing norms-based prevention paradigms for high-risk behavior, the current study aimed to quantitatively examine perceived social norms as a potential explanatory factor for sports betting behavior. The sample was comprised of 221 young adults from 36 different U.S. states (Mage = 24.4; 77.7% male; 64.6% White). Eligibility criteria included betting on sports at least twice in the past month. At baseline, participants reported perceptions of friends' sports betting approval and engagement for the next 2 weeks and then 2 weeks later reported indices of their own sports betting behavior. Generally, young adults perceived their peers to wager much more on sports betting than they themselves reported wagering, suggesting potential normative misperceptions in line with social norms theory. Those who perceived their friends to be more accepting of, and more engaged in sports betting, reported engaging in more sports betting behaviors in the subsequent 2-week period. Injunctive norms more strongly predicted young adults' total number of bets, whereas descriptive norms more strongly predicted total amount wagered and negative consequences. Findings provide foundational evidence for peer influence processes on sports betting behaviors among young adults. These key early-stage findings inform how social norms may be leveraged within forthcoming prevention/intervention approaches aimed at stymieing the rapidly growing harms associated with sports betting.

我所有的朋友都在这样做:感知社会规范预测年轻人更倾向于体育博彩行为。
体育博彩是美国增长最快的赌博行为,尤其是在年轻人中。尽管越来越多的证据表明体育博彩与公共健康有关,但这种成瘾行为的起因在很大程度上还没有得到充分研究。在整合心理理论和现有的基于规范的高风险行为预防范式的基础上,本研究旨在定量研究感知社会规范作为体育博彩行为的潜在解释因素。样本由来自美国36个不同州的221名年轻人组成(年龄= 24.4;男性77.7%;64.6%的白人)。资格标准包括在过去一个月内至少两次投注体育赛事。在基线上,参与者报告了接下来两周朋友对体育博彩的认可和参与程度,然后两周后报告了他们自己的体育博彩行为指数。一般来说,年轻人认为他们的同龄人在体育博彩上的赌注比他们自己报告的要高得多,这表明潜在的规范误解与社会规范理论一致。那些认为自己的朋友更能接受体育博彩、更能参与体育博彩的人,在接下来的两周内报告了更多的体育博彩行为。禁令规范更能预测年轻人的下注总数,而描述性规范更能预测下注总额和负面后果。研究结果为年轻人体育博彩行为的同伴影响过程提供了基础证据。这些关键的早期发现告知了如何在即将到来的预防/干预方法中利用社会规范,旨在阻止与体育博彩相关的快速增长的危害。
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