Christensen, J., Parker, S., Silberberg, A., & Hursh, S. (1998).
Trade-offs in choice between risk and delay depend on monetary amounts.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
69, 123-139.
In Experiments 1 and 2, 25 and 48 college students made binary
choices between hypothetical money amounts. In Part A, choices
were between small amounts available with certainty and larger
amounts ($10 to $10,000) available with risk. Choices in Part B
were between immediate small amounts and delayed larger amounts.
As money amount grew, risk aversion and delay aversion both
changed but in opposite ways: Risk aversion grew but delay
aversion shrank. Part C of Experiment 1 pitted risky amounts
against delayed amounts, and its results were consistent with
those of Parts A and B. Equivalences of particular risks and
delays depended on the particular monetary amounts to which they
attached. In Experiment 3, 20 college students made binary
choices between money amounts, knowing that they would actually
receive some of the selections they made. In Part A, choices were
between certain small amounts and risky larger amounts ($1 and
$10). Choice problems in Part B were between immediate small
amounts and delayed receipt of $1 or $10. The results were like
those of Experiment 1, though weaker. These results argue against
models of choice that posit an equivalence of risk and delay that
is independent of monetary amount.
Key words: choice, delay, probability, income, humans