Information use in risky decision making: Do age differences depend on affective context?
Publication year
2019Number of pages
16 p.
Source
Psychology and Aging, 34, 7, (2019), pp. 1005-1020ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor
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Organization
SW OZ BSI KLP
Journal title
Psychology and Aging
Volume
vol. 34
Issue
iss. 7
Languages used
English (eng)
Page start
p. 1005
Page end
p. 1020
Subject
Experimental Psychopathology and TreatmentAbstract
The current study focused on the degree to which decision context (deliberative vs. affective) differentially impacted the use of available information about uncertainty (i.e., probability, positive and negative outcome magnitudes, expected value, and variance/risk) when older adults were faced with decisions under risk. In addition, we examined whether individual differences in general mental ability and executive function moderated the associations between age and information use. Participants (N = 96) completed a neuropsychological assessment and the hot (affective) and cold (deliberative) versions of an explicit risk task. Our results did not find a significant Age x Hot/Cold Condition interaction on overall risk-taking. However, we found that older adults were less likely to use the full decision information available regardless of the decision context. This finding suggested more global age differences in information use. Moreover, older adults were less likely to make expected-value sensitive decisions, regardless of the hot/cold context. Finally, we found that low performance on measures of executive functioning, but not general mental ability, appears to be a risk factor for lower information use. This pattern appears in middle age and progressively becomes stronger in older age. The current work provides evidence that common underlying decision processes may operate in risk tasks deemed either affective or deliberative. It further suggests that underlying mechanisms such as information use may be paramount, relative to differences in the affective context. Additionally, individual differences in neuropsychological function may act as a moderator in the tendency to use available information across affective context.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [248471]
- Electronic publications [135728]
- Faculty of Social Sciences [30737]
- Open Access publications [109001]
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