Abstract

People frequently fail to wait for delayed rewards after choosing them. These preference reversals are sometimes thought to reflect self-control failure. Other times, however, continuing to wait for a delayed reward may be counterproductive (e.g., when reward timing uncertainty is high). Research has demonstrated that people can calibrate how long to wait for rewards in a given environment. Thus, the role of self-control might be to integrate information about the environment to flexibly adapt behavior, not merely to promote waiting. Here we tested effects of acute stress, which has been shown to tax control processes, on persistence, and the calibration of persistence, in young adult human participants. Half the participants (n = 60) performed a task in which persistence was optimal, and the other half (n = 60) performed a task in which it was optimal to quit waiting for reward soon after each trial began. Each participant completed the task either after cold pressor stress or no stress. Stress did not influence persistence or optimal calibration of persistence. Nevertheless, an exploratory analysis revealed an “inverted-U” relationship between cortisol increase and performance in the stress groups, suggesting that choosing the adaptive waiting policy may be facilitated with some stress and impaired with severe stress.

Highlights

  • The ability to persist in waiting for future rewards is central to selfcontrol

  • Given the finding that only thirty-six individuals within the stress group showed a cortisol response that was greater than zero, we investigated whether cortisol “responder” status was related to self-report measures of stress

  • The current study tested the effects of acute physical stress on a process that is emblematic of self-control: waiting for delayed rewards

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Summary

Introduction

The ability to persist in waiting for future rewards is central to selfcontrol. Yet people often fail to persist in waiting, even when they express a desire for the future reward. Many people do not stick to healthy diets even when they have a goal to lose weight Contextual factors, such as the person's beliefs about the environment, can influence whether an individual persists in waiting for future rewards. If a person believes that not having seen results in a week means they are unlikely to lose weight at all, they may give up on their diet. Another potentially relevant contextual factor is one's ongoing level of stress. It is unknown how stress affects overall levels of persistence or how it interacts with beliefs about the environment. The present study tests how acute aversive stress, induced by the cold pressor test, affects subsequent decisions about waiting for future rewards

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