4.7 Article

Older adults process the probability of winning sooner but weigh it less during lottery decisions

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-15432-y

Keywords

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Funding

  1. German Research Foundation (DFG) [CRC 940]
  2. Bundesministerium fur Bildung und Forschung (BMBF) [FZK 01GQ1424D]
  3. Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst
  4. DFG [EXC 2050/1, 390696704]

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This study examined the effects of enhancing the saliency of reward probabilities on value-based decision-making and its interaction with age. The results showed that older adults were less sensitive to reward probabilities compared to younger adults and had a more stochastic decision-making process. However, the decision-aid increased the influence of probability information on both age groups without altering the relative timing of accumulation for probability versus magnitude.
Empirical evidence has shown that visually enhancing the saliency of reward probabilities can ease the cognitive demands of value comparisons and improve value-based decisions in old age. In the present study, we used a time-varying drift diffusion model that includes starting time parameters to better understand (1) how increasing the saliency of reward probabilities may affect the dynamics of value-based decision-making and (2) how these effects may interact with age. We examined choices made by younger and older adults in a mixed lottery choice task. On a subset of trials, we used a color-coding scheme to highlight the saliency of reward probabilities, which served as a decision-aid. The results showed that, in control trials, older adults started to consider probability relative to magnitude information sooner than younger adults, but that their evidence accumulation processes were less sensitive to reward probabilities than that of younger adults. This may indicate a noisier and more stochastic information accumulation process during value-based decisions in old age. The decision-aid increased the influence of probability information on evidence accumulation rates in both age groups, but did not alter the relative timing of accumulation for probability versus magnitude in either group.

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