Judgment and Decision Making (Mar 2013)

Risky choice in younger versus older adults: Affective context matters

  • Yumi Huang,
  • Stacey Wood,
  • Dale Berger,
  • Yaniv Hanoch

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1017/S1930297500005106
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8
pp. 179 – 187

Abstract

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Earlier frameworks have indicated that older adults tend to experience decline in their deliberative decisional capacity, while their affective abilities tend to remain intact (Peters, Hess, Västfjäll, & Auman, 2007). The present study applied this framework to the study of risky decision-making across the lifespan. Two versions of the Columbia Card Task (CCT) were used to trigger either affective decision-making (i.e., the “warm” CCT) or deliberative decision-making (i.e., the “cold” CCT) in a sample of 158 individuals across the lifespan. Overall there were no age differences in risk seeking. However, there was a significant interaction between age and condition, such that older adults were relatively more risk seeking in the cold condition only. In terms of everyday decision-making, context matters and risk propensity may shift within older adults depending upon the context.

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