Decision-making and risk aversion among depressive adults
Decision-making and risk aversion among depressive adults
Depression is associated with behavioral avoidance of potentially rewarding environmental contexts. The present study examined the performance of depressive individuals and controls on a neuropsychological measure of decision-making that favors risk avoidance. Depressive (n = 41) and control (n = 44) participants were administered the Iowa Gambling Task, which measures the ability of participants to maximize earnings by choosing low-risk, low-reward responses over high-risk, high-reward responses. Results provided partial support for the hypothesis that depressive participants would learn to avoid risky responses faster than control participants. Depressive participants demonstrated better performance than controls, scoring higher than controls overall and showing a trend toward earning more money overall. However, the lack of an interaction between depressive status and time does not support the specific hypothesis of more rapid learning. Findings suggested enhanced feedback-based decision-making and risk aversion among depressive individuals
depression, reward, decision-making, iowa gambling task
567-576
Smoski, Moria J.
48abb01e-18fe-49c0-a40a-702d6733a160
Lynch, Thomas R.
29e90123-0aef-46c8-b320-1617fb48bb20
Rosenthal, M. Zachary
704abe38-0b92-4965-acda-99474da78e16
Cheavens, Jennifer S.
c9b944a2-375d-4cd3-bc83-9c4c9217e450
Chapman, Alexander L.
e40a7f1e-ae38-4568-85e4-f03d8b756162
Krishnan, Ranga R.
39928ee7-a940-4778-b818-7b8394881828
December 2008
Smoski, Moria J.
48abb01e-18fe-49c0-a40a-702d6733a160
Lynch, Thomas R.
29e90123-0aef-46c8-b320-1617fb48bb20
Rosenthal, M. Zachary
704abe38-0b92-4965-acda-99474da78e16
Cheavens, Jennifer S.
c9b944a2-375d-4cd3-bc83-9c4c9217e450
Chapman, Alexander L.
e40a7f1e-ae38-4568-85e4-f03d8b756162
Krishnan, Ranga R.
39928ee7-a940-4778-b818-7b8394881828
Smoski, Moria J., Lynch, Thomas R., Rosenthal, M. Zachary, Cheavens, Jennifer S., Chapman, Alexander L. and Krishnan, Ranga R.
(2008)
Decision-making and risk aversion among depressive adults.
Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry, 39 (4), .
(doi:10.1016/j.jbtep.2008.01.004).
(PMID:18342834)
Abstract
Depression is associated with behavioral avoidance of potentially rewarding environmental contexts. The present study examined the performance of depressive individuals and controls on a neuropsychological measure of decision-making that favors risk avoidance. Depressive (n = 41) and control (n = 44) participants were administered the Iowa Gambling Task, which measures the ability of participants to maximize earnings by choosing low-risk, low-reward responses over high-risk, high-reward responses. Results provided partial support for the hypothesis that depressive participants would learn to avoid risky responses faster than control participants. Depressive participants demonstrated better performance than controls, scoring higher than controls overall and showing a trend toward earning more money overall. However, the lack of an interaction between depressive status and time does not support the specific hypothesis of more rapid learning. Findings suggested enhanced feedback-based decision-making and risk aversion among depressive individuals
This record has no associated files available for download.
More information
e-pub ahead of print date: 2 February 2008
Published date: December 2008
Keywords:
depression, reward, decision-making, iowa gambling task
Organisations:
Psychology
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 193963
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/193963
ISSN: 0005-7916
PURE UUID: 60c1b9a7-eed5-4afa-ab3d-0a407f917c5b
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 22 Jul 2011 08:56
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:32
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Moria J. Smoski
Author:
M. Zachary Rosenthal
Author:
Jennifer S. Cheavens
Author:
Alexander L. Chapman
Author:
Ranga R. Krishnan
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics