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Measuring the Subjective Value of Risky and Ambiguous Options using Experimental Economics and Functional MRI Methods
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Background uncertainty does not increase risk aversion in decision making.

Johannes Leder1, Philipp Chapkovski2, Astrid Schütz1

  • 1Department of Psychology, University of Bamberg, 96045, Bamberg, Germany.

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|October 29, 2024
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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

This study investigated how background uncertainty affects risk-taking behavior. Despite theoretical predictions, four experiments with 863 participants found no significant impact of background uncertainty on decision-making.

Keywords:
AmbiguityBackground uncertaintyDecision makingRiskRisk-taking behaviorUncertainty

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Area of Science:

  • Behavioral Economics
  • Decision Science
  • Cognitive Psychology

Background:

  • Economic and psychological theories suggest background uncertainty, independent of a decision, can influence risk-taking.
  • Prior empirical evidence is inconclusive, often based on limited experimental designs.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To systematically investigate the effect of background uncertainty on decision-making.
  • To differentiate and test the impact of background ambiguity (unknown probabilities) versus background risk (known probabilities).
  • To test if the type of background uncertainty moderates its effect on risk-taking.

Main Methods:

  • Literature review to distinguish background ambiguity and background risk.
  • Four controlled experiments involving 863 participants.
  • Induction of background uncertainty (ambiguity or risk) using varied methods.
  • Measurement of risk-taking behavior using multiple validated tasks.

Main Results:

  • No significant effect of background uncertainty (either ambiguity or risk) on participants' risk-taking behavior was observed.
  • The type of background uncertainty did not significantly moderate the effect on risk-taking.

Conclusions:

  • The study's findings do not support the hypothesis that background uncertainty influences risk-taking behavior in decision-making.
  • Further research may be needed to explore potential moderators or alternative theoretical frameworks.