Computational Psychiatry (Oct 2021)

Multi-Round Trust Game Quantifies Inter-Individual Differences in Social Exchange from Adolescence to Adulthood

  • Andreas Hula,
  • Michael Moutoussis,
  • Geert-Jan Will,
  • Danae Kokorikou,
  • Andrea M. Reiter,
  • Gabriel Ziegler,
  • NSPN Consortium,
  • Ed Bullmore,
  • Peter B. Jones,
  • Ian Goodyer,
  • Peter Fonagy,
  • P. Read Montague,
  • Raymond J. Dolan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5334/cpsy.65
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 1

Abstract

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Investing in strangers in a socio-economic exchange is risky, as we may be uncertain whether they will reciprocate. Nevertheless, the potential rewards for cooperating can be great. Here, we used a cross sectional sample (n = 784) to study how the challenges of cooperation versus defection are negotiated across an important period of the lifespan: from adolescence to young adulthood (ages 14 to 25). We quantified social behaviour using a multi round investor-trustee task, phenotyping individuals using a validated model whose parameters characterise patterns of real exchange and constitute latent social characteristics. We found highly significant differences in investment behaviour according to age, sex, socio-economic status and IQ. Consistent with the literature, we showed an overall trend towards higher trust from adolescence to young adulthood but, in a novel finding, we characterized key cognitive mechanisms explaining this, especially regarding socio-economic risk aversion. Males showed lower risk-aversion, associated with greater investments. We also found that inequality aversion was higher in females and, in a novel relation, that socio-economic deprivation was associated with more risk averse play.

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