4.6 Article

Body in the face of uncertainty: The role of autonomic arousal and interoception in decision-making under risk and ambiguity

Journal

PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 58, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/psyp.13840

Keywords

autonomic arousal; decision‐ making; gambling; interoception; risk‐ taking

Funding

  1. NOMIS Foundation Distinguished Scientist Award for the `Body & Image in Arts & Science' (BIAS) Project [ERC-2010-StG-262853]

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The study found that anticipation phase is the largest source of arousal in gambling behavior, suggesting that anticipation is a major contributor to arousal during decision-making; physiological responses were higher following positive outcomes than negative outcomes; there is no direct relationship between interoceptive dimensions and attitudes towards risk and ambiguity, but in individuals with higher interoceptive accuracy, skin conductance responses can differentiate between risk and ambiguity during decision-making.
Influential theories posit that bodily responses are important for decision-making under uncertainty. However, the evidence of the role of our ability to perceive subtle bodily changes (interoception) in decision-making under uncertainty is mixed. These differences may arise from the fact that uncertainty, a part of daily decision-making, can be fractionated into risk (known probabilities) and ambiguity (unknown probabilities). Here we examine the role of arousal and interoception in shaping risky and ambiguous decisions. We measured skin conductance responses and heart rate changes while participants (N = 40) made gambling decisions in the context of risky and ambiguous lotteries. Results reveal that the anticipation phase produced the largest arousal responses, suggesting that the anticipation is a major contributor to arousal during gambling behavior, regardless of the uncertainty type. Moreover, physiological responses were higher following positive outcomes than negative outcomes. We did not find any direct relation between interoceptive dimensions and the attitudes toward risk and ambiguity. However, in those with higher interoceptive accuracy, skin conductance responses differentiated between risk and ambiguity as well as between the gamble phases (decision, anticipation, and outcome). Together, our findings demonstrate that decision-making under uncertainty is to some extent associated with individual differences in the ability both to generate and to perceive accurately subtle changes in bodily arousal during the decision-making process. However, these changes seem to be moderately related to the type of uncertainty (risk or ambiguity).

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