The evolution of decision-making under risk: Framing effects in monkey risk preferences |
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Authors: | Venkat R. Lakshminarayanan M. Keith Chen |
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Affiliation: | a Department of Psychology, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06520, USAb School of Management & Department of Economics, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06520, USA |
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Abstract: | When making choices between risky options, human decision-makers exhibit a number of framing effects. One of the most prominent framing effects is the tendency for decision makers to evaluate gambles relative to a reference point, and to act risk-seeking when prospects are framed as losses but risk-averse when identical prospects are framed as gains. This tendency for risk-preferences to reverse between loss and gain frames has been termed the reflection effect, and is one of the primary predictions of Prospect Theory. Here, we explore whether non-human primates exhibit a similar reflection effect. Using a token-trading task, we show that capuchin monkeys (Cebus apella) exhibit an analogous reversal of risk preferences depending on whether outcomes are presented as gains or losses, suggesting that similar framing effects also influence choice in non-human primates. This finding suggests that the mechanisms that drive framing effects in humans may be evolutionarily ancient, extending broadly across the primate order. |
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Keywords: | Risk-taking Prospect theory Evolution Non-human primate Economics Heuristics |
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