Rodman Alexandra M, Powers Katherine E, Insel Catherine, Kastman Erik K, Kabotyanski Katherine E, Stark Abigail M, Worthington Steven, Somerville Leah H
Department of Psychology, Harvard University.
Institute for Quantitative Social Science, Harvard University.
J Exp Psychol Gen. 2021 Jan;150(1):103-113. doi: 10.1037/xge0000769. Epub 2020 Jun 4.
Adults titrate the degree of physical effort they are willing to expend according to the magnitude of reward they expect to obtain, a process guided by incentive motivation. However, it remains unclear whether adolescents, who are undergoing normative developmental changes in cognitive and reward processing, translate incentive motivation into action in a way that is similarly tuned to reward value and economical in effort utilization. The present study adapted a classic physical effort paradigm to quantify age-related changes in motivation-based and strategic markers of effort exertion for monetary rewards from adolescence to early adulthood. One hundred three participants aged 12-23 years completed a task that involved exerting low or high amounts of physical effort, in the form of a hand grip, to earn low or high amounts of money. Adolescents and young adults exhibited highly similar incentive-modulated effort for reward according to measures of peak grip force and speed, suggesting that motivation for monetary reward is consistent across age. However, young adults expended energy more economically and strategically: Whereas adolescents were prone to exert excess physical effort beyond what was required to earn reward, young adults were more likely to strategically prepare before each grip phase and conserve energy by opting out of low reward trials. This work extends theoretical models of development of incentive-driven behavior by demonstrating that layered on similarity in motivational value for monetary reward, there are important differences in the way behavior is flexibly adjusted in the presence of reward from adolescence to young adulthood. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).
成年人会根据预期获得的奖励大小来调整他们愿意付出的体力努力程度,这一过程由激励动机引导。然而,目前尚不清楚正在经历认知和奖励处理方面规范性发育变化的青少年,是否会以与奖励价值相匹配且在努力利用上经济高效的方式,将激励动机转化为行动。本研究采用了一种经典的体力努力范式,以量化从青春期到成年早期基于动机和策略性努力指标的与年龄相关的变化,这些努力是为了获得金钱奖励。103名年龄在12至23岁之间的参与者完成了一项任务,该任务要求他们以握力的形式付出低或高程度的体力努力,以赚取低或高数额的金钱。根据峰值握力和速度的测量,青少年和年轻人在奖励激励下表现出高度相似的努力程度,这表明金钱奖励的动机在不同年龄段是一致的。然而,年轻人在精力消耗上更经济且更具策略性:青少年往往会付出超出获得奖励所需的额外体力努力,而年轻人则更有可能在每个握力阶段之前进行策略性准备,并通过选择不参与低奖励试验来保存能量。这项研究扩展了激励驱动行为发展的理论模型,表明在金钱奖励的动机价值相似的基础上,从青春期到成年早期,在有奖励的情况下行为灵活调整的方式存在重要差异。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c)2021美国心理学会,保留所有权利)