Wednesday, September 19, 2012

High temporal discounters overvalue immediate rewards rather than undervalue future rewards: An event-related brain potential study

Something for the psychiatrist you will see in the hospital to consider  how you will react to your doctors presentation on how long/whether you will recover. And that should change the protocols that are given you for rehab.
http://www.springerlink.com/content/r6163q4527278820/

Abstract

Impulsivity is characterized in part by heightened sensitivity to immediate relative to future rewards. Although previous research has suggested that “high discounters” in intertemporal choice tasks tend to prefer immediate over future rewards because they devalue the latter, it remains possible that they instead overvalue immediate rewards. To investigate this question, we recorded the reward positivity, a component of the event-related brain potential (ERP) associated with reward processing, with participants engaged in a task in which they received both immediate and future rewards and nonrewards. The participants also completed a temporal discounting task without ERP recording. We found that immediate but not future rewards elicited the reward positivity. High discounters also produced larger reward positivities to immediate rewards than did low discounters, indicating that high discounters relatively overvalued immediate rewards. These findings suggest that high discounters may be more motivated than low discounters to work for monetary rewards, irrespective of the time of arrival of the incentives.

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