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Journal Article

Citation

Burnett S, Bault N, Coricelli G, Blakemore SJ. Cogn. Dev. 2010; 25(2): 183-196.

Affiliation

UCL Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, 17 Queen Square, London WC1N 3AR, UK.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2010, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.cogdev.2009.11.003

PMID

20689728

PMCID

PMC2896475

Abstract

This study investigated adolescent males' decision-making under risk, and the emotional response to decision outcomes, using a probabilistic gambling task designed to evoke counterfactually mediated emotions (relief and regret). Participants were 20 adolescents (aged 9-11), 26 young adolescents (aged 12-15), 20 mid-adolescents (aged 15-18) and 17 adults (aged 25-35). All were male. The ability to maximize expected value improved with age. However, there was an inverted U-shaped developmental pattern for risk-seeking. The age at which risk-taking was highest was 14.38 years. Although emotion ratings overall did not differ across age, there was an increase between childhood and young adolescence in the strength of counterfactually mediated emotions (relief and regret) reported after receiving feedback about the gamble outcome. We suggest that continuing development of the emotional response to outcomes may be a factor contributing to adolescents' risky behaviour.


Language: en

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