4.6 Article

Money, kisses, and electric shocks: On the affective psychology of risk

Journal

PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE
Volume 12, Issue 3, Pages 185-190

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1111/1467-9280.00334

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Prospect's theory's S-shaped weighting function is often said to reflect the psychophysics of chance. we propose an effective rather than psychophysical deconstruction of the weighting function resting on two assumptions. First, preferences depend on the affective reactions associated with potential outcomes of a risky choice. Second, even with monetary values controlled some outcomes are relatively affect-poor. Although the psychophysical and affective approaches are complementary, the affective approach has one novel implication. Weighting functions will be more S-shaped for lotteries involving affect-rich than affect-poor outcomes. That is, people will be more sensitive to departures from impossibility and certainty but less sensitive to intermediate probability variations for affect-rich outcomes. We corroborated this prediction by observing outcome probability interactions: An affect poor prize was preferred over an affect-rich prize under certainty, but the direction of preference reversed under low-probability. We suggest that the assumption of probability outcome independence, adopted both by both expected-utility and prospect theory, ay hold across outcomes of different monetary values, but not different affective values.

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