SummaryHumans and animals tend both to avoid uncertainty and to prefer immediate over future rewards. The comorbidity of psychiatric disorders such as impulsivity, problem gambling, and addiction suggests that a common mechanism may underlie risk sensitivity and temporal discounting [1–6]. Nonetheless, the precise relationship between these two traits remains largely unknown [3, 5]. To examine whether risk sensitivity and temporal discounting reflect a common process, we recorded choices made by two rhesus macaques in a visual gambling task [7] while we varied the delay between trials. We found that preference for the risky option declined with increasing delay between sequential choices in the task, even when all other task parameters were...
Studies of animal impulsivity generally find steep subjective devaluation, or discounting, of delaye...
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...
SummaryHumans and animals tend both to avoid uncertainty and to prefer immediate over future rewards...
Humans and other animals are idiosyncratically sensitive to risk, either preferring or avoiding opti...
Humans and other animals are idiosyncratically sensitive to risk, either preferring or avoiding opti...
Adaptive decisions require that decision makers factor in the subjective values of different possibl...
Humans and animals are more likely to take an action leading to an immediate reward than actions wit...
Adaptive decisions require that decision makers factor in the subjective values of different possibl...
Adaptive decisions require that decision makers factor in the subjective values of different possibl...
Adaptive decisions require that decision makers factor in the subjective values of different possibl...
Adaptive decisions require that decision makers factor in the subjective values of different possibl...
Humans and animals show diverse preferences for risks ("trait-like" risk attitude) and shift their p...
Rhesus monkeys have been shown to prefer risky over safe options in experiential decision-making tas...
International audienceIn humans, the attitude toward risk is not neutral and is dissimilar between b...
Studies of animal impulsivity generally find steep subjective devaluation, or discounting, of delaye...
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...
SummaryHumans and animals tend both to avoid uncertainty and to prefer immediate over future rewards...
Humans and other animals are idiosyncratically sensitive to risk, either preferring or avoiding opti...
Humans and other animals are idiosyncratically sensitive to risk, either preferring or avoiding opti...
Adaptive decisions require that decision makers factor in the subjective values of different possibl...
Humans and animals are more likely to take an action leading to an immediate reward than actions wit...
Adaptive decisions require that decision makers factor in the subjective values of different possibl...
Adaptive decisions require that decision makers factor in the subjective values of different possibl...
Adaptive decisions require that decision makers factor in the subjective values of different possibl...
Adaptive decisions require that decision makers factor in the subjective values of different possibl...
Humans and animals show diverse preferences for risks ("trait-like" risk attitude) and shift their p...
Rhesus monkeys have been shown to prefer risky over safe options in experiential decision-making tas...
International audienceIn humans, the attitude toward risk is not neutral and is dissimilar between b...
Studies of animal impulsivity generally find steep subjective devaluation, or discounting, of delaye...
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...