| Literature DB >> 24916358 |
Peter Sokol-Hessner1, Catherine A Hartley, Jeffrey R Hamilton, Elizabeth A Phelps.
Abstract
Emotions have been proposed to inform risky decision-making through the influence of affective physiological responses on subjective value. The ability to perceive internal body states, or "interoception" may influence this relationship. Here, we examined whether interoception predicts participants' degree of loss aversion, which has been previously linked to choice-related arousal responses. Participants performed both a heartbeat-detection task indexing interoception and a risky monetary decision-making task, from which loss aversion, risk attitudes and choice consistency were parametrically measured. Interoceptive ability correlated selectively with loss aversion and was unrelated to the other value parameters. This finding suggests that specific and separable component processes underlying valuation are shaped not only by our physiological responses, as shown in previous findings, but also by our interoceptive access to such signals.Entities:
Keywords: Decision-making; Emotion; Interoception; Loss aversion
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24916358 PMCID: PMC4263686 DOI: 10.1080/02699931.2014.925426
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cogn Emot ISSN: 0269-9931