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Simultaneous motor demands affect decision making under objective risk
Authors:Magnus Liebherr  Patric Schubert  Heike Averbeck  Matthias Brand
Affiliation:1. Department of General Psychology: Cognition, University of Duisburg-Essen, Duisburg, Germanymagnus.liebherr@uni-due.de;3. Faculty of Health and Social Sciences, Hochschule Fresenius, University of Applied Sciences, Idstein, Germany;4. Department of General Psychology: Cognition, University of Duisburg-Essen, Duisburg, Germany;5. Center for Behavioral Addictions Research (CeBAR), University of Duisburg-Essen, Duisburg, Germany;6. Erwin L.?Hahn Institute for Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Essen, Germany
Abstract:Previous studies on factors influencing decision making focused on the effects of additional cognitive load, stress, psychological disorders, and the process of aging. The potential effects of simultaneously performing motor demands have been neglected, so far. However, previous motor / cognitive dual-task studies provide evidence for both negative as well as facilitating effects of simultaneously performing cognitive and motor tasks. The study at hand, aimed to investigate the effects of decision making under objective risk while performing additional motor demands. Seventy-two participants ranging from 18 to 30 years performed the Game of Dice Task either while sitting or while standing on one leg. Participants were asked to put similar effort on the decision task and the motor demand. The results revealed a significant main effect for “choice”, as well as a significant interaction of “choice”?×?“group”. Participants standing on one leg more frequently selected the most disadvantageous choice (one single number), whereas the “sitting group” most often selected the advantageous combination of four numbers. The findings are discussed under the aspects of executive functions, working memory, stress, somatic markers and the dual-process theory.
Keywords:Decision making  executive function  dual-task
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