4.6 Article

The self's choice: Priming attentional focus on bodily self promotes loss frequency bias

Journal

CURRENT PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 42, Issue 1, Pages 378-389

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12144-021-01400-8

Keywords

Decision-making; Bodily self; Narrative self; Iowa gambling task; Self; Loss aversion

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Previous research suggests that focusing on self-representations enhances the ability to evaluate internal sensations. This study analyzed the decision-making process under various conditions of stimulated self-representations and found that participants tended to choose losses more frequently when primed with bodily self-representations. This could be due to the distractive nature of bodily self-focus, diminishing participants' long-term outcome commitment, or the enhanced interoception leading to aversion to losses.
When attention is focused on self representation(s), the ability to evaluate one's internal sensations is enhanced, according to previous research by Ainley and colleagues (Consciousness and Cognition, 22(4), 1231-1238, 2013). Self-representations are usually distinguished between bodily and narrative. Both bodily and narrative representations improve decision-making processes, in that the consideration of alternatives is informed by sensations experienced deep inside the body (e.g., anxiety) as suggest by the literature (Noel, Brevers & Bechara in Frontiers in Psychiatry, 4, 179, 2013). The objective of the present study is to analyze the decision-making process in multiple conditions of stimulated self-representations. Participants played the Iowa Gambling Task three times (a baseline without stimuli and two randomly ordered stimulations to prime bodily and narrative self-representations). While no significant differences emerged regarding advantageous choices, participants showed loss frequency bias in the condition with bodily-self representation priming. Two interpretations are proposed: bodily-self focus acted as a distractor diminishing participants' commitment to long term outcomes or enhanced interoception promoted aversion to losses. Directions are given for future research and clinical implications.

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