Literature DB >> 20721774

Affective and cognitive decision-making in adolescents.

Anna C K van Duijvenvoorde1, Brenda R J Jansen, Ingmar Visser, Hilde M Huizenga.   

Abstract

Adolescents demonstrate impaired decision-making in emotionally arousing situations, yet they appear to exhibit relatively mature decision-making skills in predominantly cognitive, low-arousal situations. In this study we compared adolescents' (13-15 years) performance on matched affective and cognitive decision-making tasks, in order to determine (1) their performance level on each task and (2) whether performance on the cognitive task was associated with performance on the affective task. Both tasks required a comparison of choice dimensions characterized by frequency of loss, amount of loss, and constant gain. Results indicated that in the affective task, adolescents performed sub-optimally by considering only the frequency of loss, whereas in the cognitive task adolescents used relatively mature decision rules by considering two or all three choice dimensions. Performance on the affective task was not related to performance on the cognitive task. These results are discussed in light of neural developmental trajectories observed in adolescence.

Mesh:

Year:  2010        PMID: 20721774     DOI: 10.1080/87565641.2010.494749

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dev Neuropsychol        ISSN: 1532-6942            Impact factor:   2.253


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