Literature DB >> 22775123

Reduced risk-taking behavior as a trait feature of anxiety.

Cinzia Giorgetta1, Alessandro Grecucci, Sophia Zuanon, Laura Perini, Matteo Balestrieri, Nicolao Bonini, Alan G Sanfey, Paolo Brambilla.   

Abstract

Affect can have a significant influence on decision-making processes and subsequent choice. One particularly relevant type of negative affect is anxiety, which serves to enhance responses to threatening stimuli or situations. In its exaggerated form, it can lead to psychiatric disorders, with detrimental consequences for quality of life, including the ability to make choices. This study investigated, for the first time, how pathological anxiety affects risk-taking behavior. In this study, 20 anxious participants meeting Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition, criteria for either generalized anxiety disorder (n = 10) and for panic attack disorder (n = 10), as well as 20 matched nonanxious controls, performed a gambling task. To investigate the tendency toward either a risk-seeking or a risk-averse behavior, we employed a task that did not allow for learning from outcomes. Anxious participants made significantly fewer risky choices than matched nonanxious participants. Specifically, they become risk-avoidant after gains. Moreover, anxious participants not only were less happy after gains but were also less sad after losses, and they also evinced less desire to change their choices after losses than did nonanxious participants. Importantly, whereas the desire to switch choice was followed by actual choice switch for all participants, happiness directly predicted subsequent risky choices, particularly in the nonanxious participants. Further analyses revealed that the anxious participants' risk-avoidance behavior was independent of different types of anxiety disorder (panic attack disorder and generalized anxiety disorder) as well as of the effects of psychotropic drugs treatment. This study demonstrates a specific role for anxiety in individual decision making. In particular, hypersensitivity to potential threats and pessimistic evaluation of future events reduced risk-taking behavior. PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2012 APA, all rights reserved.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22775123     DOI: 10.1037/a0029119

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Emotion        ISSN: 1528-3542


  37 in total

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6.  Predicting risk decisions in a modified Balloon Analogue Risk Task: Conventional and single-trial ERP analyses.

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8.  Moderation of the effects of discrimination-induced affective responses on health outcomes.

Authors:  Meg Gerrard; Frederick X Gibbons; Mary E Fleischli; Carolyn E Cutrona; Michelle L Stock
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9.  Age and Social Context Modulate the Effect of Anxiety on Risk-taking in Pediatric Samples.

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Journal:  J Abnorm Child Psychol       Date:  2016-08

10.  Anxiety and Gender Influence Reward-Related Processes in Children and Adolescents.

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Journal:  J Child Adolesc Psychopharmacol       Date:  2016-01-18       Impact factor: 2.576

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