Sports wins, sunny days may lead to gambling: study
People who are in a good mood are willing to take riskier bets.
New York: An unexpected win by your favourite sports team or an unusually sunny day will not improve your chances of winning a lottery, but it may increase
the likelihood that you will buy a ticket, a new US study has found.
Previous laboratory research had shown that people who are in a good mood are willing to take riskier bets and that unexpected positive outcomes are particularly likely to boost people's mood.
But there was little research establishing a link between unexpected positive outcomes and actual risk taking behaviour in the real world. Researchers from the New York University and University College London analysed two years' worth of daily lottery purchases in 174 New York City neighbourhoods.
They found that citywide gambling increased following unrelated, unexpectedly positive events - in this case, unexpected sports wins and unusually sunny days. To examine sports outcomes, researchers first tabulated all wins and losses in regular and postseason games played by New York City-area teams in 2011 and 2012, including teams in the National Football League, National Basketball League, National Hockey League, and Major League Baseball.
Using this data, they calculated a daily expectation of each team's win probability, which served as the prediction for the next day's sports outcomes. On each day that a team played, the difference between the predicted outcome and the true outcome provided a measure of how unexpectedly good or bad the actual sports outcome was.
The researchers also used satellite-derived solar irradiance data to measure the amount of sunshine for each day in 2011 and 2012 in the New York metropolitan area. As with the sports data, the researchers calculated a weighted daily average for amount of sunshine that served as the prediction for the next day's sunshine.
To account for their potential effects on gambling, the researchers also included variables in their statistical model to represent the specific day of the week, holidays, typical paycheck cycles, and severe weather events.
They found that the more unexpected the sports teams' wins were, the more New York City residents spent on lottery purchases the next day. Similarly, the more unexpected sunshine there was, the more people gambled that day.
"On a day in which multiple sports teams unexpectedly win, approximately USD 160,000 more is spent on lottery gambling relative to an average day," researchers said.
"These results reveal a remarkable malleability to human risk taking - people's gambling behaviour is shaped by unexpected, but incidental outcomes in their environment," said Ross Otto from New York University. The findings were published in the journal Psychological Science.