The Effect of Skeuomorphic Digital Interfaces on the Illusion of Control Over Gambling Outcomes
Document Type
Article
Journal/Book Title/Conference
Journal of Gambling Studies
Volume
37
Issue
2
Publisher
Springer New York LLC
Publication Date
7-14-2020
First Page
623
Last Page
642
Abstract
The current research focuses on how the use of "skeuomorphs" in digital design interacts with an illusion of control to influence gambling behavior. Skeuomorphism is a design concept in which an aspect of a modern item is made to represent its outdated counterpart, even if this representation serves no functional purpose, such as hands "dealing" cards or horses "racing" on the screen of a digital machine. It is proposed that the inclusion of these non-essential links to physical objects in digital gambling games interacts with a player's illusion of control over the outcome to influence behavior. Shown across a pretest and three experiments, the inclusion of skeuomorphic elements in the design of gambling games, compared to a minimalistic "flat" design, increases amount gambled. Additionally, skeuomorphism and manipulated illusion of control interact to further increase the amount gambled. The manuscript concludes with a discussion on the practical, theoretical, and policy implications of this research.
Recommended Citation
Meng, Matthew D., and R. Bret Leary (2021), "The Effect of Skeuomorphic Digital Interfaces on the Illusion of Control Over Gambling Outcomes," Journal of Gambling Studies, 37(2), 623-642.