Hess Thomas M, Queen Tara L, Patterson Taryn R
Department of Psychology, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina, USA.
J Behav Decis Mak. 2012 Jan 1;25(1):29-40. doi: 10.1002/bdm.711.
The effects of aging and deliberative activities on decision making were examined. In two separate tasks, young, middle-aged, and older adults were presented with four alternatives and given instructions to choose the best one. Following study, participants were either given additional time to think about their decision or were prevented from doing so. Decision quality did not benefit from additional deliberative activity when the structure of the stimuli facilitated fluent online processing. In contrast, deliberation promoted performance when such processing was more difficult. In addition, those individuals who focused on attribute information relevant to the decision context performed better than those who did not. Age differences in performance were minimal, but older adults with lower levels of education or cognitive ability tended to perform worse than the rest of the sample under conditions where deliberative skills were required to promote performance. The results are inconsistent with recent proposals regarding the benefits of passive deliberation. In addition, the results support the general assertion that the age effects in decision making will be most evident in situations dependent upon deliberative skills.
研究了衰老和审慎活动对决策的影响。在两项独立任务中,向年轻、中年和老年成年人呈现四个选项,并指示他们选择最佳选项。在研究之后,参与者要么被给予额外时间思考他们的决定,要么被阻止这样做。当刺激结构促进流畅的在线处理时,决策质量并没有从额外的审慎活动中受益。相比之下,当这种处理更加困难时,审慎会提高表现。此外,那些专注于与决策背景相关的属性信息的个体比那些没有专注的个体表现更好。表现上的年龄差异很小,但在需要审慎技能来提高表现的条件下,教育水平或认知能力较低的老年人往往比样本中的其他人群表现更差。这些结果与最近关于被动审慎益处的提议不一致。此外,结果支持了这样一个普遍观点,即决策中的年龄效应在依赖审慎技能的情况下将最为明显。