Humans and other animals are idiosyncratically sensitive to risk, either preferring or avoiding options having the same value but differing in uncertainty. Many explanations for risk sensitivity rely on the non-linear shape of a hypothesized utility curve. Because such models do not place any importance on uncertainty extit{per se}, utility curve-based accounts predict indifference between risky and riskless options that offer the same distribution of rewards. Here we show that monkeys strongly prefer uncertain gambles to alternating rewards with the same payoffs, demonstrating that uncertainty itself contributes to the appeal of risky options. Based on prior observations, we hypothesized that the appeal of the risky option is enhanced by t...
Abstract Determining how both humans and animals make decisions in risky situations is a central pro...
Animals commonly face fluctuations in their environment and resources. To maximize their benefits,th...
International audienceIn contrast to human adults, risk proneness in the gain domain is usually obse...
Humans and other animals are idiosyncratically sensitive to risk, either preferring or avoiding opti...
Humans and animals show diverse preferences for risks ("trait-like" risk attitude) and shift their p...
SummaryHumans and animals tend both to avoid uncertainty and to prefer immediate over future rewards...
International audienceIn humans, the attitude toward risk is not neutral and is dissimilar between b...
International audienceIn humans, the attitude toward risk is not neutral and is dissimilar between b...
Many studies investigate animals’ decisions under risk focussing on individuals’ attitudes towards r...
Animals deal with predictable and unpredictable events on a daily basis. Yet our knowledge of the co...
Many studies investigate the decisions made by animals by focussing on their individual attitudes to...
International audienceDecision making under risk, i.e., choices involving benefits and/or losses, is...
Decision outcomes in unpredictable environments may not have exact known probabilities. Yet the pred...
This work was supported by grants from the Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR-08-412 BLAN-0042-01...
Economic choices are largely determined by two principal elements, reward value (utility) and probab...
Abstract Determining how both humans and animals make decisions in risky situations is a central pro...
Animals commonly face fluctuations in their environment and resources. To maximize their benefits,th...
International audienceIn contrast to human adults, risk proneness in the gain domain is usually obse...
Humans and other animals are idiosyncratically sensitive to risk, either preferring or avoiding opti...
Humans and animals show diverse preferences for risks ("trait-like" risk attitude) and shift their p...
SummaryHumans and animals tend both to avoid uncertainty and to prefer immediate over future rewards...
International audienceIn humans, the attitude toward risk is not neutral and is dissimilar between b...
International audienceIn humans, the attitude toward risk is not neutral and is dissimilar between b...
Many studies investigate animals’ decisions under risk focussing on individuals’ attitudes towards r...
Animals deal with predictable and unpredictable events on a daily basis. Yet our knowledge of the co...
Many studies investigate the decisions made by animals by focussing on their individual attitudes to...
International audienceDecision making under risk, i.e., choices involving benefits and/or losses, is...
Decision outcomes in unpredictable environments may not have exact known probabilities. Yet the pred...
This work was supported by grants from the Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR-08-412 BLAN-0042-01...
Economic choices are largely determined by two principal elements, reward value (utility) and probab...
Abstract Determining how both humans and animals make decisions in risky situations is a central pro...
Animals commonly face fluctuations in their environment and resources. To maximize their benefits,th...
International audienceIn contrast to human adults, risk proneness in the gain domain is usually obse...