Thursday, July 30, 2009

Risk Behaviour in Preschool Children

This has already been mentioned elsewhere, but it's a nice compliment to Kevin's post.

Risk-seeking behavior of preschool children in a gambling task

Bruno Moreira, Raul Matsushita, Sergio Da Silva

A recent neurobiology study showed that monkeys systematically prefer risky targets in a visual gambling task. We set a similar experiment with preschool children to assess their attitudes toward risk and found the children, like the monkeys, to be risk seeking. This suggests that adult humans are not born risk averse, but become risk averse. Our experiment also suggests that this behavioral change may be due to learning from negative experiences in their risky choices. We also showed that though emotional states and predetermined prenatal testosterone can influence children’s preferences toward risk, these factors could not override learning experiences.

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