Hostname: page-component-6766d58669-bkrcr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2026-05-15T00:33:31.251Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Carryover of domain-dependent risk preferences in a novel decision-making task

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2023

Martin S. Shapiro*
Affiliation:
Department of Psychology, California State University, Fresno
Paul C. Price
Affiliation:
California State University, Fresno
Edward Mitchell
Affiliation:
University of Oxford
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

We investigated whether people’s risk taking tendency established in one domain (gains or losses) carries over to the other domain. Participants played a game in which they made repeated decisions between a fixed payoff and a risky option, where the outcome of the risky option depended on whether they had responded correctly on a difficult perceptual-memory task. In some trials, participants played to gain points; on others, they played to avoid losing points. In two studies, we observed the following pattern of results. 1) Participants risked less on gain trials than on loss trials. 2) This difference in risk taking persisted (carried over) when the domain changed from gains to losses and vice versa (with the effect of experiencing losses first being stronger than the effect of experiencing gains first). 3) There was no analogous carryover effect on responses to a delay discounting measure, but there was a carryover effect on responses on a risk attitude measure. We compare these results with those from other recent studies and discuss various ways of explaining them.

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
The authors license this article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors [2020] This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Figure 0

Figure 1: The sequence of events in a single ‘gain’ trial in the present experiments. Participants press a key to display a sample image for 200 ms, followed by a 1000 ms delay, and then four images appear. Participants choose the image they believe matches the sample, rate their confidence, decide whether or not to take a risk (the payoff of which depends on whether they previously selected the correct picture), receive feedback on correctness and points, and then begin the next trial with different images

Figure 1

Figure 2: The mean and standard error for risk taking for the five groups. Green (lighter) bars represent gain trials, and blue (darker) bars represent loss trials. For all-gain, all-loss, gain-loss, and loss-gain groups, the left bar in each pair represents the first block of 50 trials and the right bar the second block of 50 trials. For the mixed group, the order of the bars is arbitrary because the gain and loss trials were mixed together.

Figure 2

Figure 3: The mean and standard error for accuracy on the DMTS task for the five groups. Green bars represent gain trials, and blue bars represent loss trials. For all-gain, all-loss, gain-loss, and loss-gain groups, the left bar in each pair represents the first block of 50 trials and the right bar the second block of 50 trials. For the mixed group, the order of the bars is arbitrary because the gain and loss trials were mixed together.

Figure 3

Figure 4: The mean and standard error for confidence scores for the five groups. Green bars represent gain trials, and blue bars represent loss trials. For all-gain, all-loss, gain-loss, and loss-gain groups, the left bar in each pair represents the first block of 50 trials and the right bar the second block of 50 trials. For the mixed group, the order of the bars is arbitrary because the gain and loss trials were mixed together.

Figure 4

Figure 5: Means and standard error of individual median response times taken to respond to the target selection in the DMTS, during the first and second blocks of 50 trials. The figure shows that the all-gain group (green) took less time to respond than the all-loss group (blue). Responding incorrectly took longer, especially in the all-loss group.

Figure 5

Figure 6: The means and standard error of time to make the choice of whether to risk or play it safe (on the first and second block of 50 trials). This figure shows that the all-gain group (green) took less time to respond than the all-loss group (blue), especially when they chose to play it safe.

Figure 6

Figure 7: The means and standard errors of the proportion of risky choices over the last 80 trials for each group in Experiment 2. The green bars represent gain trials, and the blue bars represent loss trials.

Figure 7

Figure 8: The means and standard error of the time to respond to the target selection in the DMTS during the last 80 trials. The figure shows that the all-gain group (green bars) took less time to respond than the all-loss group (blue bars). Responding incorrectly took longer, especially in the all-loss group.

Figure 8

Figure 9: The means and standard error of the time to make a choice to risk or play it safe in the final 80 trials. This figure shows that the all-gain group (green) took less time to respond than the all-loss group (blue), particularly when the choice was to play it safew.

Figure 9

Table 1: Means (and Standard Deviations) for Participants DMTS Choice Times, Separately by Group, Block, and Correctness.

Figure 10

Table 2: Means and Standard Deviations of Participants Median Times to Decide Whether to Take a Risk, Separately by Group, Block, and Decision (Safe vs. Risk)

Figure 11

Table 3: Means and Standard Deviations of Participants’ Median DMTS and Risky-Decision Response Times for the Final 80 Trials for Each Group in Experiment 2.

Supplementary material: File

Shapiro et al. supplementary material

Shapiro et al. supplementary material
Download Shapiro et al. supplementary material(File)
File 3.3 MB