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Journal Article

Citation

Mata R, Josef AK, Samanez-Larkin GR, Hertwig R. Ann. N. Y. Acad. Sci. 2011; 1235(1): 18-29.

Affiliation

Department for Cognitive and Decision Sciences, University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland. Psychological Sciences, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/j.1749-6632.2011.06200.x

PMID

22023565

PMCID

PMC3332530

Abstract

Does risk taking change as a function of age? We conducted a systematic literature search and found 29 comparisons between younger and older adults on behavioral tasks thought to measure risk taking (N= 4,093). The reports relied on various tasks differing in several respects, such as the amount of learning required or the choice framing (gains vs. losses). The results suggest that age-related differences vary considerably as a function of task characteristics, in particular the learning requirements of the task. In decisions from experience, age-related differences in risk taking were a function of decreased learning performance: older adults were more risk seeking compared to younger adults when learning led to risk-avoidant behavior, but were more risk averse when learning led to risk-seeking behavior. In decisions from description, younger adults and older adults showed similar risk-taking behavior for the majority of the tasks, and there were no clear age-related differences as a function of gain/loss framing. We discuss limitations and strengths of past research and provide suggestions for future work on age-related differences in risk taking.


Language: en

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