The Rational Adolescent: Strategic Information Processing during Decision Making Revealed by Eye Tracking.


Autoria(s): Kwak, Y; Payne, JW; Cohen, AL; Huettel, SA
Data(s)

01/10/2015

Formato

20 - 30

Identificador

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26388664

Cogn Dev, 2015, 36 pp. 20 - 30

0885-2014

http://hdl.handle.net/10161/10590

Relação

Cogn Dev

10.1016/j.cogdev.2015.08.001

Palavras-Chave #adolescent #decision strategy #eye tracking #heuristics
Tipo

Journal Article

Cobertura

United States

Resumo

Adolescence is often viewed as a time of irrational, risky decision-making - despite adolescents' competence in other cognitive domains. In this study, we examined the strategies used by adolescents (N=30) and young adults (N=47) to resolve complex, multi-outcome economic gambles. Compared to adults, adolescents were more likely to make conservative, loss-minimizing choices consistent with economic models. Eye-tracking data showed that prior to decisions, adolescents acquired more information in a more thorough manner; that is, they engaged in a more analytic processing strategy indicative of trade-offs between decision variables. In contrast, young adults' decisions were more consistent with heuristics that simplified the decision problem, at the expense of analytic precision. Collectively, these results demonstrate a counter-intuitive developmental transition in economic decision making: adolescents' decisions are more consistent with rational-choice models, while young adults more readily engage task-appropriate heuristics.

Idioma(s)

ENG