Habib Cognition Lab

Press & Media

Coverage of the lab's research on gambling disorder, near-miss effects, and the neuroscience of decision-making in popular media and press.

Media Coverage

Research in the Public Eye

The Atlantic — "How Casinos Enable Gambling Addicts"

Feature article by John Rosengren (December 2016) examining how casino design exploits the psychology of addiction. The lab's research on near-miss effects and striatal activation is cited as foundational evidence for how slot machines are engineered to sustain compulsive play.

Read the article →

Time Magazine — "Getting to No"

Jeffrey Kluger's article (March 2012) on the neuroscience of willpower and behavioral inhibition. The lab's work on the brain mechanisms underlying the near-miss effect and impulsive gambling behavior is featured as a central example of how reward circuitry drives behavior that people cannot easily stop.

Read the article →

This American Life — "Blackjack" (Episode 466)

Ira Glass and Sarah Koenig's episode "Harrah's Today, Gone Tomorrow" (2012) explores the psychology of compulsive gambling. The lab's neuroimaging findings on near-miss outcomes are described in accessible terms for a general audience, illustrating how the brain's reward system responds to almost-wins.

Listen to the episode →

Scientific American — The Power of Habit Excerpt

An excerpt from Charles Duhigg's book published in Scientific American (2012) discusses the neuroscience of habits and addiction. The lab's findings on how near-miss slot machine outcomes engage reward pathways are cited as a key example of how habits form and are sustained at the neural level.

Read the excerpt →

Book Citation

The Power of Habit

The lab's research on the near-miss effect in pathological gambling is cited in Charles Duhigg's The Power of Habit: Why We Do What We Do in Life and Business (Random House, 2012), which spent 60 weeks on the New York Times bestseller list and has sold over 3 million copies worldwide.

The book uses the lab's neuroimaging findings to explain why slot machines — particularly near-miss outcomes — are so effective at sustaining compulsive gambling behavior, connecting the science to broader arguments about the neuroscience of habit and addiction.

View on Amazon →
Duhigg, C. (2012)
The Power of Habit
Why We Do What We Do in Life and Business
Random House · #1 New York Times Bestseller

Recognition

Awards & Honors

Joseph V. Brady Award

Society for the Quantitative Analysis of Behavior

Awarded for Significant Contributions to Behavioral Science, for the publication: Habib, R., & Dixon, M.R. (2010). Neurobehavioral evidence for the "near-miss" effect in pathological gamblers. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 93, 313–328.

Research Profile

By the Numbers

Academic impact metrics for the lab's published research.

50+
Peer-reviewed publications
32
h-index
7,900+
Citations
25+
Years of research

Metrics via Google Scholar.

Press Inquiries

For media inquiries about research on gambling disorder, near-miss effects, or decision-making neuroscience, please contact Dr. Habib directly. For consulting and expert witness inquiries, visit rezahabib.com.

reza@habibcognitionlab.com