As the proportion of older adults continues to grow at an unprecedented rate, aging adults may be required to make increasingly more independent health-related and financial decisions. Thus, it is increasingly imperative to better understand the impact of age-related changes in both cognitive and affective processing on decision-making. Both behavioral and neural evidence suggests that younger and older adults differ in the processing of monetary incentives (e.g., older adults show attenuated anticipation of monetary losses), which could have specific consequences for financial decisions (e.g., older adults may be generally less sensitive to the warning signs of potential negative outcomes). Although these affective preferences may be healthy and adaptive for regulating emotional experience and optimizing well-being, they may have harmful effects on financial learning and decision making. The main objective of the proposed research is to examine age differences in incentive learning and incentive-based decision-making using both behavioral measures of performance and functional magnetic resonance imaging.
The specific aims of this proposal are to (1) investigate the influence of reinforcement valence on incentive processing across the life span, (2) examine whether older adults show the same valence asymmetry in more ? cognitively demanding reversal learning, and (3) examine whether older adults differ from younger adults both in rational risky decision-making and risk preference in a more applied investment decision paradigm. Findings from this line of basic research may have implications for scientists' understanding of how processes underlying decision-making change with age, and might eventually also facilitate identification of markers for suboptimal decisions in older adults. The long-term goal of this line of research is to improve the financial and emotional health of older adults by improving decision-making at the individual level. ? ? ?

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Aging (NIA)
Type
Predoctoral Individual National Research Service Award (F31)
Project #
1F31AG032804-01A1
Application #
7614797
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-F02A-X (20))
Program Officer
King, Jonathan W
Project Start
2009-01-01
Project End
2010-09-30
Budget Start
2009-01-01
Budget End
2009-12-31
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2008
Total Cost
$40,972
Indirect Cost
Name
Stanford University
Department
Psychology
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
009214214
City
Stanford
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
94305
Samanez-Larkin, Gregory R; Knutson, Brian (2015) Decision making in the ageing brain: changes in affective and motivational circuits. Nat Rev Neurosci 16:278-89
Wu, Charlene C; Samanez-Larkin, Gregory R; Katovich, Kiefer et al. (2014) Affective traits link to reliable neural markers of incentive anticipation. Neuroimage 84:279-89
Samanez-Larkin, Gregory R; Worthy, Darrell A; Mata, Rui et al. (2014) Adult age differences in frontostriatal representation of prediction error but not reward outcome. Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci 14:672-82
Kuhnen, Camelia M; Samanez-Larkin, Gregory R; Knutson, Brian (2013) Serotonergic genotypes, neuroticism, and financial choices. PLoS One 8:e54632
Samanez-Larkin, Gregory R; Levens, Sara M; Perry, Lee M et al. (2012) Frontostriatal white matter integrity mediates adult age differences in probabilistic reward learning. J Neurosci 32:5333-7
Samanez-Larkin, Gregory R; Wagner, Anthony D; Knutson, Brian (2011) Expected value information improves financial risk taking across the adult life span. Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci 6:207-17
Knutson, Brian; Samanez-Larkin, Gregory R; Kuhnen, Camelia M (2011) Gain and loss learning differentially contribute to life financial outcomes. PLoS One 6:e24390
Carstensen, Laura L; Turan, Bulent; Scheibe, Susanne et al. (2011) Emotional experience improves with age: evidence based on over 10 years of experience sampling. Psychol Aging 26:21-33
Samanez-Larkin, Gregory R; Kuhnen, Camelia M; Yoo, Daniel J et al. (2010) Variability in nucleus accumbens activity mediates age-related suboptimal financial risk taking. J Neurosci 30:1426-34
Samanez-Larkin, Gregory R; Robertson, Elaine R; Mikels, Joseph A et al. (2009) Selective attention to emotion in the aging brain. Psychol Aging 24:519-529

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