Pietras, C. J., & Hackenberg, T. D. (2001).
Risk-sensitive choice in humans as a function of an earnings budget.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
76, 1-19.
Risky choice in 3 adult humans was investigated across procedural
manipulations designed to model energy-budget manipulations
conducted with nonhumans. Subjects were presented with repeated
choices between a fixed and a variable number of points. An
energy budget was simulated by use of an earnings budget,
defined as the number of points needed within a block of trials
for points to be exchanged for money. During positive
earnings-budget conditions, exclusive preference for the fixed
option met the earnings requirement. During negative earnings-
budget conditions, exclusive preference for the certain option
did not meet the earnings requirement, but choice for the
variable option met the requirement probabilistically. Choice was
generally risk averse (the fixed option was preferred) when the
earnings budget was positive and risk prone (the variable option
was preferred) when the earnings budget was negative.
Furthermore, choice was most risk prone during negative
earnings-budget conditions in which the earnings requirement was
most stringent. Local choice patterns were also frequently
consistent with the predictions of a dynamic optimization model,
indicating that choice was simultaneously sensitive to short-term
choice contingencies, current point earnings, and the earnings
requirement. Overall, these results show that the patterns of
risky choice generated by energy-budget variables can also be
produced by choice contingencies that do not involve immediate
survival, and that risky choice in humans may be similar to that
shown in nonhumans when choice is studied under analogous
experimental conditions.
Key words: concurrent schedules, risky choice, optimal foraging,
energy budgets, adult humans, key press, points exchangeable for
money