Following Your Heart or Your Head: Focusing on Emotions Versus Information Differentially Influences the Decisions of Younger and Older Adults

被引:77
作者
Mikels, Joseph A. [1 ]
Loeckenhoff, Corinna E. [1 ]
Maglio, Sam J. [1 ]
Carstensen, Laura L. [1 ]
Goldstein, Mary K. [2 ,3 ]
Garber, Alan [2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Stanford Univ, Dept Psychol, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
[2] VA Palo Alto Hlth Care Syst, Palo Alto, CA USA
[3] Stanford Univ, Ctr Primary Care & Outcomes Res, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
关键词
aging; decision making; emotion; affect heuristic; working memory; AGE-DIFFERENCES; WORKING-MEMORY; CHOICE; HEALTH; MANIPULATIONS; STRATEGIES; STEREOTYPE; SELECTION; RISK;
D O I
10.1037/a0018500
中图分类号
B849 [应用心理学];
学科分类号
040203 ;
摘要
Research on aging has indicated that whereas deliberative cognitive processes decline with age, emotional processes are relatively spared. To examine the implications of these divergent trajectories in the context of health care choices, we investigated whether instructional manipulations emphasizing a focus on feelings or details would have differential effects on decision quality among younger and older adults. We presented 60 younger and 60 older adults with health care choices that required them to hold in mind and consider multiple pieces of information. Instructional manipulations in the emotion-focus condition asked participants to focus on their emotional reactions to the options, report their feelings about the options, and then make a choice. In the information-focus condition, participants were instructed to focus on the specific attributes, report the details about the options, and then make a choice. In a control condition, no directives were given. Manipulation checks indicated that the instructions were successful in eliciting different modes of processing. Decision quality data indicate that younger adults performed better in the information-focus than in the control condition whereas older adults performed better in the emotion-focus and control conditions than in the information-focus condition. Findings support and extend extant theorizing on aging and decision making as well as suggest that interventions to improve decision-making quality should take the age of the decision maker into account.
引用
收藏
页码:87 / 95
页数:9
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