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Interactions and implications of Fuzzy-Trace theory for risk taking behaviors in bipolar disorder

Interactions and implications of Fuzzy-Trace theory for risk taking behaviors in bipolar disorder
Interactions and implications of Fuzzy-Trace theory for risk taking behaviors in bipolar disorder
Background
According to Fuzzy-Trace Theory (FTT), qualitative, bottom-line, “gist” reasoning leads to less risk taking and more mature decision-making, less easily swayed by emotions than quantitative, detail-oriented, “verbatim” reasoning. In Bipolar disorder deleterious risky behaviors are common. Prior research confirmed the relationships posited between FTT and risk taking. We aim to understand whether FTT acts upon risk taking in the manner proposed in the FTT framework, namely, that (a) gist “values” mediate the role of “categorical gist”. Furthermore, the roles of mania and impulsivity, cited as factors for risk-taking, remain to be clarified. In this study, we investigate if (b) manic symptoms and impulsivity moderate these relationships.
Methods
Participants (N = 105) completed an online survey including demographics, clinical variables, symptomatology, FTT, risk taking and risk perception.
Results
Mediational models indicated that (a) Gist Values mediated Categorical Gist's effect on risk taking, as expected by the FTT framework. (b) Impulsivity moderates risk taking, but manic-type symptomatology does not.
Limitations
Voluntary, self-report surveys may have low participant motivation and limit the diagnostic validity and the inpatient generalizability of the results.
Conclusions
The results move beyond a focus on mood-related aspects of Bipolar disorder and confirm the importance of understanding reasoning processes like FTT in combination with impulsivity, as potential behavioral factors of risk taking in Bipolar disorder. The clarifications on FTT's functioning as a mechanism prescribe possible openings for more efficacious reduction of risky behaviors through behavioral interventions focusing on value creation.
0165-0327
305-313
Lukacs, Julia Nora
1ff8259a-fcba-4af0-93be-26a6b880c212
Sicilia, Anna Chiara
31889f9f-f701-4dcc-b70a-30eb3d5eb31f
Jones, Steven
c903deb2-5c0f-4438-b9df-8da15ebe3c6b
Perez Algorta, Guillermo
b5df4f02-c868-42b9-8e2e-730c14a9c7b2
Lukacs, Julia Nora
1ff8259a-fcba-4af0-93be-26a6b880c212
Sicilia, Anna Chiara
31889f9f-f701-4dcc-b70a-30eb3d5eb31f
Jones, Steven
c903deb2-5c0f-4438-b9df-8da15ebe3c6b
Perez Algorta, Guillermo
b5df4f02-c868-42b9-8e2e-730c14a9c7b2

Lukacs, Julia Nora, Sicilia, Anna Chiara, Jones, Steven and Perez Algorta, Guillermo (2021) Interactions and implications of Fuzzy-Trace theory for risk taking behaviors in bipolar disorder. Journal of Affective Disorders, 293, 305-313, [293]. (doi:10.1016/j.jad.2021.06.035).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background
According to Fuzzy-Trace Theory (FTT), qualitative, bottom-line, “gist” reasoning leads to less risk taking and more mature decision-making, less easily swayed by emotions than quantitative, detail-oriented, “verbatim” reasoning. In Bipolar disorder deleterious risky behaviors are common. Prior research confirmed the relationships posited between FTT and risk taking. We aim to understand whether FTT acts upon risk taking in the manner proposed in the FTT framework, namely, that (a) gist “values” mediate the role of “categorical gist”. Furthermore, the roles of mania and impulsivity, cited as factors for risk-taking, remain to be clarified. In this study, we investigate if (b) manic symptoms and impulsivity moderate these relationships.
Methods
Participants (N = 105) completed an online survey including demographics, clinical variables, symptomatology, FTT, risk taking and risk perception.
Results
Mediational models indicated that (a) Gist Values mediated Categorical Gist's effect on risk taking, as expected by the FTT framework. (b) Impulsivity moderates risk taking, but manic-type symptomatology does not.
Limitations
Voluntary, self-report surveys may have low participant motivation and limit the diagnostic validity and the inpatient generalizability of the results.
Conclusions
The results move beyond a focus on mood-related aspects of Bipolar disorder and confirm the importance of understanding reasoning processes like FTT in combination with impulsivity, as potential behavioral factors of risk taking in Bipolar disorder. The clarifications on FTT's functioning as a mechanism prescribe possible openings for more efficacious reduction of risky behaviors through behavioral interventions focusing on value creation.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 27 June 2021
Published date: 3 July 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 501297
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/501297
ISSN: 0165-0327
PURE UUID: a44ca18e-517e-41ea-8612-3ecabb816670
ORCID for Anna Chiara Sicilia: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4428-2017

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Date deposited: 28 May 2025 16:53
Last modified: 29 May 2025 02:17

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Contributors

Author: Julia Nora Lukacs
Author: Anna Chiara Sicilia ORCID iD
Author: Steven Jones
Author: Guillermo Perez Algorta

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