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Developmental differences in description-based versus experience-based decision making under risk in children

J Exp Child Psychol. 2022 Jul:219:105401. doi: 10.1016/j.jecp.2022.105401. Epub 2022 Mar 1.

Abstract

The willingness to take a risk is shaped by temperaments and cognitive abilities, both of which develop rapidly during childhood. In the adult developmental literature, a distinction is drawn between description-based tasks, which provide explicit choice-reward information, and experience-based tasks, which require decisions from past experience, each emphasizing different cognitive demands. Although developmental trends have been investigated for both types of decisions, few studies have compared description-based and experience-based decision making in the same sample of children. In the current study, children (N = 112; 5-9 years of age) completed both description-based and experience-based decision tasks tailored for use with young children. Child temperament was reported by the children's primary teacher. Behavioral measures suggested that the willingness to take a risk in a description-based task increased with age, whereas it decreased in an experience-based task. However, computational modeling alongside further inspection of the behavioral data suggested that these opposite developmental trends across the two types of tasks both were associated with related capacities: older (vs. younger) children's higher sensitivity to experienced losses and higher outcome sensitivity to described rewards and losses. From the temperamental characteristics, higher attentional focusing was linked with a higher learning rate on the experience-based task and a bias to accept gambles in the gain domain on the description-based task. Our findings demonstrate the importance of comparing children's behavior across qualitatively different tasks rather than studying a single behavior in isolation.

Keywords: Children; Computational modeling; Decision making under risk; Description-based decision making; Experience-based decision making; Risk taking.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Attention
  • Child
  • Child, Preschool
  • Decision Making*
  • Family
  • Gambling* / psychology
  • Humans
  • Reward