TY - JOUR
T1 - Profiling older adults’ decision-making under risk: the role of cognitive functioning and personality traits
AU - Colautti, Laura
AU - Robba, Matteo Paolo
AU - Antonietti, Alessandro
AU - Iannello, Paola
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - In decision making under risk manifold individual differences are involved. To investigate their effect – specifically the effects of executive functions, memory, impulsivity, and consideration for future consequences − 130 healthy older adults were assessed through cognitive tests, self-report tools, and decisional tasks (the Game of Dice Task and the Balloon Analogue Risk-Taking Task). From a Latent Profile Analysis, three profiles characterised by differences in decisional performances emerged. “Impulsive and present-focused” individuals, notable for high levels of impulsivity and consideration for immediate consequences, and “Cautious” individuals, characterised by having impulsivity scores below average, presented decisional performances characterised by lower incomes and a higher number of risky choices compared to “Impulsive and cognitively functional” individuals, signified by the highest levels of impulsivity and cognitive functioning. Findings outlined how different configurations of individual differences can affect older adults’ decisions and implications can follow for deepening the decisional mechanisms in older adults.
AB - In decision making under risk manifold individual differences are involved. To investigate their effect – specifically the effects of executive functions, memory, impulsivity, and consideration for future consequences − 130 healthy older adults were assessed through cognitive tests, self-report tools, and decisional tasks (the Game of Dice Task and the Balloon Analogue Risk-Taking Task). From a Latent Profile Analysis, three profiles characterised by differences in decisional performances emerged. “Impulsive and present-focused” individuals, notable for high levels of impulsivity and consideration for immediate consequences, and “Cautious” individuals, characterised by having impulsivity scores below average, presented decisional performances characterised by lower incomes and a higher number of risky choices compared to “Impulsive and cognitively functional” individuals, signified by the highest levels of impulsivity and cognitive functioning. Findings outlined how different configurations of individual differences can affect older adults’ decisions and implications can follow for deepening the decisional mechanisms in older adults.
KW - cognitive abilities
KW - decision making
KW - impulsivity
KW - latent profile analysis
KW - risk
KW - cognitive abilities
KW - decision making
KW - impulsivity
KW - latent profile analysis
KW - risk
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/306658
U2 - 10.1080/13546783.2025.2455646
DO - 10.1080/13546783.2025.2455646
M3 - Article
SN - 1354-6783
SP - 1
EP - 23
JO - Thinking and Reasoning
JF - Thinking and Reasoning
ER -