Abstract

Prior methods used to assess individual differences related to risk have not focused on an important component of risk management: how willing individuals are to pay for or take actions to insure what they already have. It is not clear whether this type of protective risk management taps into the same individual differences as does risk taking propensity measured by existing risk taking tasks. We developed a novel task to assess protective risk management, the Balloon Analog Insurance Task (BAIT), which is modeled after the Balloon Analog Risk Task (BART). In the BAIT, individuals are forced to decide how much money they are willing to pay in order to insure a specific fraction of their prior winnings given changing but imprecise levels of risk of monetary loss. Participants completed the BART and BAIT for real monetary rewards, and completed six self report questionnaires. The amount of insurance purchased on the BAIT was positively correlated with scores on the Intolerance of Uncertainty Scale and on the Checking scale of the revised Obsessive Compulsive Inventory. Conversely, the amount of insurance purchased was negatively correlated with scores on the Domain Specific Risk Taking Questionnaire, and on the Psychopathic Personality Inventory (PPI). Furthermore, relationships between insurance purchased and these scales remained significant after controlling for the BART in linear regression analyses, and the BART was only a significant predictor for measures on one scale - the PPI. Our results reveal that behavior on the BAIT taps into a number of individual differences that are not related to behavior on another measure of risk taking. We propose that the BAIT may provide a useful complement to the BART in the assessment of risk management style.

Highlights

  • Managing risk is a critical part of human endeavors

  • Since individuals began the Balloon Analog Insurance Task (BAIT) with their earnings from the Balloon Analogue Risk Task (BART), we examined how much individuals earned on the BART in dollars (BART_$Total) in order to see if the amount earned on the BART influenced the amount of insurance purchased on the BAIT

  • We investigated the relationship between measures on the BART and BAIT and found that there were no significant

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Summary

Introduction

Managing risk is a critical part of human endeavors. Decisions requiring an assessment of risk range widely from whether to wear a seat belt or have unprotected sex to how to invest ones money. During the BAIT, individuals are repeatedly forced to decide how much they are willing to pay in order to protect a specific fraction of their prior monetary winnings given changing, but imprecise levels of risk of loss. We propose that this task may provide a useful compliment to the BART, or other risk assessment tasks by assessing a unique aspect of risk tolerance. We provide data supporting that it captures distinct variance from the BART and provide preliminary data that it outperforms the BART in predicting individual differences in attitudes towards uncertainty, attitudes towards engaging in risky behaviors, and obsessive compulsive symptoms

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