Study shows why it is so scary to gamble
Relevant offers
Money
People are afraid to lose money and an unusual study released on Monday explains why - the brain's fear centre controls the response to a gamble.
The study of two women with brain lesions that made them unafraid to lose on a gamble showed the amygdala, the brain's fear centre, activates at the very thought of losing money.
The finding, reported in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, offers insight into economic behaviour and suggests that humans evolved to be cautious about the prospects of losing food or other valued possessions.
Benedetto De Martinoa of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena and University College of London and colleagues were studying why people will turn down gambles that are likely to lead to gain.
"Laboratory and field evidence suggests that people often avoid risks with losses even when they might earn a substantially larger gain, a behavioural preference termed 'loss aversion'," they wrote.
"For instance, people will avoid gambles in which they are equally likely to either lose $10 or win $15, even though the expected value of the gamble is positive ($2.50)."
They studied two women with a rare genetic condition called Urbach-Wiethe disease, which damages the amygdala, the almond-shaped centre in the brain that controls fear and certain other acute emotions.
The researchers compared the women's responses to 12 people with undamaged brains. They noted this kind of study usually involves only a few people as it is not possible or ethical to deliberately damage a person's brain to see what happens.
The volunteers were asked to make gambles in which there was an equal probability they would win $20 or lose $5 (a risk most people will take) - or would win or lose $20 (one most people will reject).
The two patients with damaged amygdalas fearlessly risked a $50 pot.
"We think this shows that the amygdala is critical for triggering a sense of caution toward making gambles in which you might lose," Colin Camerer of Caltech, who worked in the study, said in a statement.
"A fully functioning amygdala appears to make us more cautious," added his colleague Ralph Adolphs. "We already know that the amygdala is involved in processing fear, and it also appears to make us 'afraid' to risk losing money."
The study could also help researchers understand why some people are more willing to take risks than others. Perhaps genetic differences in the DNA activated in the amygdala explain it, the researchers said.
- Reuters
Sponsored links
Food prices unchanged in January
Kirkaldie & Stains gears up for online future
Auckland real estate agent fined, suspended
Moody's warns France, UK, others over ratings
Stocks slip after Mainfreight result
Kiwi falls on European downgrades
Spoof Qantas Twitter account shut down
A survival guide for office introverts
US financial crisis chair quits mortgage firm
Bridgecorp loans under the spotlight
TPK travel money to be paid back
Boatie missing from idling yacht
Speaker hits back in technology row
Labour reveals PM's emails over radio show
Crusaders without Richie McCaw until April
Bullets found in American's luggage - Pakistan officials
High hopes for Valentine's surprise
Rimutaka Incline train dream on hold
'Urewera four' armed revolutionary leaders - Crown
Dad plays porn instead of Smurfs at kid's party
Guinness' all time greatest game ending
McClennan shooting for NRL title with Warriors
Dad plays porn instead of Smurfs at kid's party
Black Caps win T20 nailbiter against Zimbabwe
Speaker hits back in technology row
Houston under water when found
TPK travel money to be paid back
Crusaders without Richie McCaw until April
Birth induced so dying dad could hold daughter