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Journal Article

Citation

Barclay P, Mishra S, Sparks AM. Proc. Biol. Sci. 2018; 285(1881): e180.

Affiliation

Center for Behavior, Evolution and Culture and Department of Anthropology, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Royal Society of London)

DOI

10.1098/rspb.2018.0180

PMID

29925612

Abstract

Who takes risks, and when? The relative state model proposes two non-independent selection pressures governing risk-taking: need-based and ability-based. The need-based account suggests that actors take risks when they cannot reach target states with low-risk options (consistent with risk-sensitivity theory). The ability-based account suggests that actors engage in risk-taking when they possess traits or abilities that increase the expected value of risk-taking (by increasing the probability of success, enhancing payoffs for success or buffering against failure). Adaptive risk-taking involves integrating both considerations. Risk-takers compute the expected value of risk-taking based on their state-the interaction of embodied capital relative to one's situation, to the same individual in other circumstances or to other individuals. We provide mathematical support for this dual pathway model, and show that it can predict who will take the most risks and when (e.g. when risk-taking will be performed by those in good, poor, intermediate or extreme state only).

RESULTS confirm and elaborate on the initial verbal model of state-dependent risk-taking: selection favours agents who calibrate risk-taking based on implicit computations of condition and/or competitive (dis)advantage, which in turn drives patterned individual differences in risk-taking behaviour.

© 2018 The Author(s).


Language: en

Keywords

costly signalling; evolutionary psychology; individual differences; relative state model; risk; risk-sensitivity theory

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