The role of difficulty in dynamic risk mitigation decisions
Previous research suggests that individuals faced with risky choices seek ways to actively reduce their risks. The risk defusing operators (RDOs) that are identified through these searches can be used to prevent or compensate for (here, pre- and post-event RDOs, respectively) negative outcomes. Alt...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
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University Library Heidelberg
2017-12-01
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Series: | Journal of Dynamic Decision Making |
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Online Access: | https://journals.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/index.php/jddm/article/view/41543 |
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author | Lisa Vangsness Michael E. Young |
author_facet | Lisa Vangsness Michael E. Young |
author_sort | Lisa Vangsness |
collection | DOAJ |
description |
Previous research suggests that individuals faced with risky choices seek ways to actively reduce their risks. The risk defusing operators (RDOs) that are identified through these searches can be used to prevent or compensate for (here, pre- and post-event RDOs, respectively) negative outcomes. Although several factors that affect RDO selection have been identified, they are limited to static decisions conducted during descriptive tasks. The factors that influence RDO selection in dynamically unfolding environments are unknown, and the relationship between task characteristics and RDO selection has yet to be mapped. We used a videogame environment to conduct two experiments to address these issues and found that experienced losses impacted risk mitigation strategy: when the task was difficult, participants experienced greater losses and were more likely to select preventive RDOs (Experiment 1). Additionally, risk mitigation behavior stabilized as participants gained experience with the task (Experiments 1 and 2) and could be shifted by making an RDO easier to use (Experiment 2). Exploratory analyses suggested that these risk mitigation choices were not driven by judgments of difficulty (JODs), even though participants’ JODs were accurate and aligned with task difficulty. This research suggests that while people seek preventive RDOs when tasks are difficult and risky, risk mitigation strategy is shaped by experienced losses; decision makers do not use JODs to anticipate future risks and inform risk mitigation decisions.
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first_indexed | 2024-04-13T22:03:27Z |
format | Article |
id | doaj.art-d84b4eb385454d93b5a2d5dfb48e11b8 |
institution | Directory Open Access Journal |
issn | 2365-8037 |
language | English |
last_indexed | 2024-04-13T22:03:27Z |
publishDate | 2017-12-01 |
publisher | University Library Heidelberg |
record_format | Article |
series | Journal of Dynamic Decision Making |
spelling | doaj.art-d84b4eb385454d93b5a2d5dfb48e11b82022-12-22T02:28:01ZengUniversity Library HeidelbergJournal of Dynamic Decision Making2365-80372017-12-013110.11588/jddm.2017.1.4154341543The role of difficulty in dynamic risk mitigation decisionsLisa Vangsness0Michael E. Young1Kansas State UniversityKansas State University Previous research suggests that individuals faced with risky choices seek ways to actively reduce their risks. The risk defusing operators (RDOs) that are identified through these searches can be used to prevent or compensate for (here, pre- and post-event RDOs, respectively) negative outcomes. Although several factors that affect RDO selection have been identified, they are limited to static decisions conducted during descriptive tasks. The factors that influence RDO selection in dynamically unfolding environments are unknown, and the relationship between task characteristics and RDO selection has yet to be mapped. We used a videogame environment to conduct two experiments to address these issues and found that experienced losses impacted risk mitigation strategy: when the task was difficult, participants experienced greater losses and were more likely to select preventive RDOs (Experiment 1). Additionally, risk mitigation behavior stabilized as participants gained experience with the task (Experiments 1 and 2) and could be shifted by making an RDO easier to use (Experiment 2). Exploratory analyses suggested that these risk mitigation choices were not driven by judgments of difficulty (JODs), even though participants’ JODs were accurate and aligned with task difficulty. This research suggests that while people seek preventive RDOs when tasks are difficult and risky, risk mitigation strategy is shaped by experienced losses; decision makers do not use JODs to anticipate future risks and inform risk mitigation decisions. https://journals.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/index.php/jddm/article/view/41543difficultyrisk mitigationrisk defusing operatorsjudgments of difficultydynamic environments |
spellingShingle | Lisa Vangsness Michael E. Young The role of difficulty in dynamic risk mitigation decisions Journal of Dynamic Decision Making difficulty risk mitigation risk defusing operators judgments of difficulty dynamic environments |
title | The role of difficulty in dynamic risk mitigation decisions |
title_full | The role of difficulty in dynamic risk mitigation decisions |
title_fullStr | The role of difficulty in dynamic risk mitigation decisions |
title_full_unstemmed | The role of difficulty in dynamic risk mitigation decisions |
title_short | The role of difficulty in dynamic risk mitigation decisions |
title_sort | role of difficulty in dynamic risk mitigation decisions |
topic | difficulty risk mitigation risk defusing operators judgments of difficulty dynamic environments |
url | https://journals.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/index.php/jddm/article/view/41543 |
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