Risk taking for potential reward decreases across the lifespan
Current Biology, 2016•cell.com
The extent to which aging affects decision-making is controversial. Given the critical financial
decisions that older adults face (eg, managing retirement funds), changes in risk
preferences are of particular importance [1]. Although some studies have found that older
individuals are more risk averse than younger ones [2–4], there are also conflicting results,
and a recent meta-analysis found no evidence for a consistent change in risk taking across
the lifespan [5]. There has as yet been little examination of one potential substrate for age …
decisions that older adults face (eg, managing retirement funds), changes in risk
preferences are of particular importance [1]. Although some studies have found that older
individuals are more risk averse than younger ones [2–4], there are also conflicting results,
and a recent meta-analysis found no evidence for a consistent change in risk taking across
the lifespan [5]. There has as yet been little examination of one potential substrate for age …
Summary
The extent to which aging affects decision-making is controversial. Given the critical financial decisions that older adults face (e.g., managing retirement funds), changes in risk preferences are of particular importance [1]. Although some studies have found that older individuals are more risk averse than younger ones [2–4], there are also conflicting results, and a recent meta-analysis found no evidence for a consistent change in risk taking across the lifespan [5]. There has as yet been little examination of one potential substrate for age-related changes in decision-making, namely age-related decline in dopamine, a neuromodulator associated with risk-taking behavior. Here, we characterized choice preferences in a smartphone-based experiment (n = 25,189) in which participants chose between safe and risky options. The number of risky options chosen in trials with potential gains but not potential losses decreased gradually over the lifespan, a finding with potentially important economic consequences for an aging population. Using a novel approach-avoidance computational model, we found that a Pavlovian attraction to potential reward declined with age. This Pavlovian bias has been linked to dopamine, suggesting that age-related decline in this neuromodulator could lead to the observed decrease in risk taking.
cell.com
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