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Feedback-induced attitudinal changes in risk preferences.

Antonios Nasioulas1,2, Elise Potier3, Fabien Cerrotti4,5

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Post-choice outcome feedback consistently increases risk-taking behavior, but not decision accuracy. This effect stems from attitudinal shifts, like curiosity and anticipated regret, rather than learning from experienced outcomes.

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive psychology
  • Behavioral economics
  • Neuroscience

Background:

  • Normative decision theory assumes feedback doesn't alter preferences for fully described lotteries.
  • Empirical evidence shows feedback impacts risk-taking, but consensus on mechanisms is lacking.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To disentangle the learning and attitudinal hypotheses of feedback effects on decision-making under risk.
  • To investigate the cognitive mechanisms driving feedback-induced changes in risk-taking.

Main Methods:

  • Conducted seven behavioral experiments involving decision-making under risk with varying feedback conditions.
  • Employed fine-grained temporal analyses to differentiate between pre- and post-experience effects.
  • Examined the influence of partial versus complete feedback.

Main Results:

  • Feedback consistently increased risk-taking but did not improve decision maximization.
  • Temporal analyses indicated feedback's influence precedes outcome experience, challenging the learning hypothesis.
  • Partial feedback increased risk-taking due to curiosity; complete feedback increased it due to anticipated regret.

Conclusions:

  • Feedback biases decision-making primarily through attitudinal mechanisms, not learning.
  • Curiosity and anticipated regret are key attitudinal drivers of increased risk-taking post-feedback.
  • Understanding these attitudinal shifts is crucial for explaining decision-making under risk.