Acute stress enhances tolerance of uncertainty during decision-making

Acute stress has been shown to influence reward sensitivity, feedback learning, and risk-taking during decision-making, primarily through activation of the hypothalamic pituitary axis (HPA). However, it is unclear how acute stress affects decision-making among choices that vary in their degree of un...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cognition 2020-12, Vol.205, p.104448-104448, Article 104448
Hauptverfasser: Byrne, Kaileigh A., Peters, Caitlin, Willis, Hunter C., Phan, Dana, Cornwall, Astin, Worthy, Darrell A.
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container_start_page 104448
container_title Cognition
container_volume 205
creator Byrne, Kaileigh A.
Peters, Caitlin
Willis, Hunter C.
Phan, Dana
Cornwall, Astin
Worthy, Darrell A.
description Acute stress has been shown to influence reward sensitivity, feedback learning, and risk-taking during decision-making, primarily through activation of the hypothalamic pituitary axis (HPA). However, it is unclear how acute stress affects decision-making among choices that vary in their degree of uncertainty. To address this question, we conducted two experiments in which participants repeatedly chose between two options—a high-uncertainty option that offered highly variable rewards but was advantageous in the long-term, and a low-uncertainty option that offered smaller yet more consistent rewards. The Socially Evaluated Cold Pressor Task (SECPT) was utilized to induce acute stress. Participants in Experiment 1 (N = 114) were exposed to either the SECPT or a warm-water control condition and then completed the decision-making under uncertainty task. Compared to the control condition, those exposed to the acute stress manipulation chose the high-uncertainty option that provided highly variable but larger rewards over the option that provided stable, smaller rewards. Experiment 2 (N = 95) incorporated a salivary cortisol measure. Results replicated the behavioral findings in Experiment 1 and demonstrated that the acute stress manipulation increased salivary cortisol. This work suggests that moderate acute stress is associated with tolerance of outcome variability in contexts that depend on learning to maximize rewards. •The effect of acute stress on decision-making under uncertainty was examined.•Stress may increase one's tolerance for uncertainty during reward-based decisions.•This allows for successful pursuit of rewarding outcomes in high-stakes situations.
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source ScienceDirect Journals (5 years ago - present)
subjects Cortisol
Decision making
Experiments
Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis
Hypothalamus
Manipulation
Mental task performance
Occupational stress
Pituitary
Reinforcement
Reward
Rewards
Risk taking
Salivary cortisol
Stress
Tolerance
Uncertainty
title Acute stress enhances tolerance of uncertainty during decision-making
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