| Literature DB >> 21210182 |
Katrin Starcke1, Mirko Pawlikowski, Oliver T Wolf, Christine Altstötter-Gleich, Matthias Brand.
Abstract
Recent research suggests two ways of making decisions: an intuitive and an analytical one. The current study examines whether a secondary executive task interferes with advantageous decision-making in the Game of Dice Task (GDT), a decision-making task with explicit and stable rules that taps executive functioning. One group of participants performed the original GDT solely, two groups performed either the GDT and a 1-back or a 2-back working memory task as a secondary task simultaneously. Results show that the group which performed the GDT and the secondary task with high executive load (2-back) decided less advantageously than the group which did not perform a secondary executive task. These findings give further evidence for the view that decision-making under risky conditions taps into the rational-analytical system which acts in a serial and not parallel way as performance on the GDT is disturbed by a parallel task that also requires executive resources.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21210182 DOI: 10.1007/s10339-010-0387-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cogn Process ISSN: 1612-4782