Fears, Family, and Finances: Does Environmental Stress Facilitate Temporal Discounting?

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2019-06-20

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en

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Evolutionary-developmental psychologists have proposed that time preference, the degree to which people prefer rewards to occur now or in the future, is an environmentally-adapted trait that aids survival and reproduction given local conditions. When the environment is dangerous or uncertain, it may be optimal to display temporal discounting, to devalue future rewards and select more immediate ones instead. But it is still unclear which kinds of environmental stress are most influential in eliciting temporal discounting. In this study, we examined the associations between intertemporal choices and three dimensions of environmental stress—morbidity-mortality risk, resource scarcity, and family discord—in a large sample of adolescents and young adults (N = 1,482). The three dimensions were differentially related to decisions on a monetary intertemporal choice task: Only resource scarcity and perceived morbidity-mortality risk were significant. However, exploratory analyses suggested the effects of different environmental dimensions vary with age. Understanding these relationships will enable tailoring interventions for reducing temporal discounting to individuals who have experienced these specific stressors. Keywords: intertemporal choice, temporal discounting, adaptation, environmental stress, uncertainty

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Faculteit der Sociale Wetenschappen