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Altering the Shape of Punishment Distributions Affects Decision Making in a Modified Iowa Gambling Task
Authors:Corrine J. Seeley  Joshua G. A. Cashaback  Carlyle T. Smith  Richard J. Beninger
Affiliation:1. Queen's University, Neuroscience, Kingston, Ontario, Canada;2. McMaster University, Kinesiology, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada;3. Trent University, Psychology, Peterborough, Ontario, Canada;4. Queen's University, Psychology and Centre for Neuroscience, Kingston, Ontario, Canada
Abstract:Neuroeconomics research has shown that preference for gambling is altered by the statistical moments (mean, variance, and skew) of reward and punishment distributions. Although it has been shown that altered means can affect feedback‐based decision making tasks, little is known if the variance and skew will have an effect on these tasks. To investigate, we systematically controlled the variance (high, medium, and low) and skew (negative, zero, and positive) of the punishment distributions in a modified version of the Iowa Gambling Task. The Iowa Gambling Task has been used extensively in both academic and clinical domains to understand decision making and diagnose decision making impairments. Our results show that decision making can be altered by an interaction of variance and skew. We found a significant decrease over trials in choices from the decks with high variance and asymmetrically skewed punishments and from the decks with low variance and zero skew punishments. These results indicate that punishment distribution shape alone can change human perception of what is optimal (i.e., mean expected outcome) and may help explain what guides our day‐to‐day decisions. Copyright © 2013 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Keywords:decision making  behavior  economics  Iowa Gambling Task  variance  skew
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