ARE YOU A PLAYER: NEW UH STUDY EXAMINES
GAMERS AND THE TEXAS LOTTERY
Center for Public Policy Examines Demographics of Those Who Play
HOUSTON, Sept. 18, 2007—It has been said that you are more
likely to get struck by lightening than to score a winning lottery
ticket, but lottery players still take the chance. Just who they
are and how much they play are the questions the University of Houston
Center for Public Policy will answer in a new demographic study.
“The basic goal of this study is to provide a snapshot of
who is most likely to engage in the Texas Lottery games,”
said Jim Granato, director of the CPP. “The CPP will not only
use the standard statistical methods utilized by prior studies,
but we also intend to use data visualization tools that will present
the results in an interactive graphic format.”
The telephone survey will be managed by Richard Murray, director
of the CPP’s Survey Research Institute. Though there have
been other demographic studies on the lottery, this will differ
in that the sample population will include a greater number of consumers
whose primary means of contact is a cell phone. Traditionally, surveys
include sample populations of people who rely mostly or solely on
land lines in their homes. In this way, the CPP survey will be more
inclusive and reflective of the general population.
“As more phone users switch from land lines to cell phones,
telephone surveys that sample only traditional residential numbers
are excluding the fast-growing segment of the population that uses
mobile phones exclusively,” Murray said. “If our surveys
are to be accurate, we have to adjust to this new reality.”
The Texas Lottery is required by law to review the demographics
of its consumers every year. The last study found that Hispanics
made up the largest group of lottery consumers and that participation
in games was down.
The findings of the UH study will be released by the end of the
year and will be available online.
For more information on the UH Center for Public Policy, visit
www.uh.edu/cpp/.
About the University of Houston
The University of Houston, Texas’ premier metropolitan research
and teaching institution, is home to more than 40 research centers
and institutes and sponsors more than 300 partnerships with corporate,
civic and governmental entities. UH, the most diverse research university
in the country, stands at the forefront of education, research and
service with more than 35,000 students.
For more information about UH visit the universitys Newsroom
at www.uh.edu/admin/media/newsroom.
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