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Contextual framing of loss impacts harm avoidance during risky spatial decisions
Authors:Kevin Jarbo  David Colaço  Timothy Verstynen
Institution:1. Department of Psychology, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, USA;2. Center for the Neural Basis of Cognition, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, USA

Department of History and Philosophy of Science, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA

Abstract:Although the same decision to act can occur in multiple contexts, how these contexts differentially influence behavior is not well understood. In this paper, we investigate whether contextual framing affects individuals' behavior in spatial decision making. Although previous research suggests that individuals' judgments are sensitive to contextual (and particularly moral) factors of a scenario, no work has addressed whether this effect extends to spatial decisions. To investigate the impact of context on perceptual sensorimotor behavior, we superimposed two moral dilemmas (which we call help and harm) on a spatial decision-making paradigm. The basic task required participants select a target area while avoiding an overlapping nontarget area. Although the visuospatial task was constant, the moral context was changed when participants had to execute either a drone missile strike on enemies in the harm context or deliver ammunition to allies in the help context. Participants more strongly avoided losses in the harm context, reflected by a greater selection bias away from the nontarget (i.e., allies) on drone strike trials. These findings suggest that the contextual framing of a subjective perceived loss on a spatial decision can drive avoidant motor execution behavior.
Keywords:contextual framing  loss aversion  moral decision making  spatial decision making
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