“…The extant literature has shown that chasing represents an important step in the development and maintenance of gambling disorder (Breen & Zuckerman, 1999;Goudriaan, Yücel, & van Holst, 2014;Lesieur, 1984; see also Corless & Dickerson, 1989;Sharpe, 2002; for a review, see Nigro, Ciccarelli, & Cosenza, 2018b), and is one of the few observable signs for disordered gambling (Gainsbury, Suhonen, & Saaststamoinen, 2014), and the only criterion of gambling addiction absent in substance use disorder (Quester & Romanczuk-Seiferth, 2015). Prior research found that chasing is associated, among others, with impulsivity (Breen & Zuckerman, 1999), sensation seeking (Linnet, Røjskjaer, Nygaard, & Maher, 2006), increased activation in brain regions related to reward expectation (Campbell-Meiklejohn et al, 2008), low sensitivity to punishment (Kim & Lee, 2011), poor decision-making (Nigro et al, 2018a), disinhibition (Nigro et al, 2018b), alexithymia (Bibby, 2016), and shortened time horizon .…”