| Literature DB >> 26322000 |
Kendra L Seaman1, Chelsea M Stillman2, Darlene V Howard2, James H Howard3.
Abstract
As our society becomes more mobile and people reside farther away from their immediate families, competent decision-making has become critical for the older adults wishing to maintain their independence. However, very little is known about the relationship between residential choice and decision-making. Here we use the Balloon Analog Risk Task (BART) to examine risk-taking in two samples of older adults, one living in a retirement community and another living independently. We also used a cognitive model to gain insight into the cognitive factors underlying decision-making in these groups. We found that older adults living in a retirement community were more risk averse than their independent counterparts. Furthermore, this difference appeared to be motivated by group differences in initial perception of risk. This study suggests an intriguing difference between these two residential groups, and also points to the utility of using laboratory methods in research on real-world problems.Entities:
Keywords: aging; computational modeling; decision-making; residential choice; risk taking
Year: 2015 PMID: 26322000 PMCID: PMC4531216 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01192
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Mean values (with standard deviation in parentheses) of participant characteristics.
| Gender | 12 Female, 11 Male | 17 Female, 6 Male |
| Age (in years) | 79.87 (5.87) | 79.91 (9.72) |
| WMS-III Digit Span Backwards | 6.22 (1.81) | 6.70 (2.67) |
| NAART35 Vocabulary | 9.70 (6.87) | 13.43 (9.33) |
| 23 | 23 |
Independent, Independent older adults; Retirement, Retirement community older adults; WMS-III, Wechsler Memory Scale—Third Edition (Wechsler, .
Age was not recorded for one Retirement participant.
NAART Vocabulary is scored such that higher scores reflect poorer performance. For all other neuropsychological tests, higher scores indicate better performance.
NAART was not administered to three participants in the Independent group.
Figure 1Risk taking with experience by group. Average number of pumps per block on trials where the balloon did not explode, separated by group.
Correlations between individual characteristics, performance, and model parameters for the Balloon Analog Risk Task (BART) across both groups.
| Gender | −0.122 | 0.047 | 0.090 | −0.302 | 0.145 | −0.169 | 0.136 |
| Age | −0.008 | 0.055 | −0.049 | 0.063 | 0.034 | −0.290 | 0.314 |
| Education | −0.058 | −0.003 | −0.114 | 0.076 | −0.122 | 0.201 | −0.119 |
| NAART35 vocabulary | −0.013 | −0.031 | 0.053 | −0.115 | 0.069 | −0.156 | 0.064 |
| WMS-III digit span backwards | 0.106 | −0.017 | 0.129 | 0.338 | −0.136 | 0.024 | 0.013 |
AP, Adjusted Number of Pumps on BART (Lejuez et al., .
Initial risk perception is calculated such that higher values denote lower initial risk perception.
Gender was encoded as female = 1, male = 0.
NAART Vocabulary is scored such that higher scores are related to poorer performance. For all other neuropsychological tests, higher scores indicate better performance.
p < 0.10,
p < 0.05.