AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines how people value immediate rewards over future ones, a behavior called temporal discounting, specifically through real-time, experiential choices using artistic photographs as rewards.
  • A new task was created to evaluate these experiential decisions against traditional hypothetical scenarios, revealing that participants' choices in the two tasks were governed by distinct psychological mechanisms.
  • Results showed that while the experiential task triggered temporal discounting consistent with delays and rewards, anxiety levels influenced choice behavior differently in the two settings, suggesting differing cognitive processes at play.

Article Abstract

When faced with intertemporal choices, people typically devalue rewards available in the future compared to rewards more immediately available, a phenomenon known as temporal discounting. Decisions involving intertemporal choices arise daily, with critical impact on health and financial wellbeing. Although many such decisions are "experiential" in that they involve delays and rewards that are experienced in real-time and can inform subsequent choices, most studies have focused on intertemporal choices with hypothetical outcomes (or outcomes delivered after all decisions are made). The present study focused on experiential intertemporal choices. First, a novel intertemporal choice task was developed and validated, using delays experienced in real time and artistic photographs as consumable perceptual rewards. Second, performance on the experiential task was compared to performance on a classic intertemporal choice task with hypothetical outcomes. Involvement of distinct processes across tasks was probed by examining differential relations to state and trait anxiety. A two-parameter logistic function framework was proposed to fit indifference point data. This approach accounts for individual variability not only in the delay at which an individual switches from choosing the delayed to more immediate option, but also in the slope of that switch. Fit results indicated that the experiential task elicited temporal discounting, with effective trade-off between delay and perceptual reward. Comparison with the hypothetical intertemporal choice task suggested distinct mechanisms: first, temporal discounting across the two tasks was not correlated; and second, state and trait anxiety both were associated with choice behavior in the experiential task, albeit in distinct ways, whereas neither was significantly associated with choice behavior in the hypothetical task. The engagement of different processes in the experiential compared to hypothetical task may align with neural evidence for the recruitment of the hippocampus in animal but not in classic human intertemporal choice studies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8121536PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0251480PLOS

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