Counterfactual Evaluation of Outcomes in Social Risk Decision-Making Situations: The Cognitive Developmental Paradox Revisited
Date
2016Abstract
We report a study that examined the existence of a cognitive developmental paradox in the
counterfactual evaluation of decision-making outcomes. According to this paradox adolescents
and young adults could be able to apply counterfactual reasoning and, yet, their counterfactual
evaluation of outcomes could be biased in a salient socio-emotional context. To this aim, we analyzed the impact of health and social feedback on the counterfactual evaluation of outcomes in a
laboratory decision-making task involving short narratives with the presence of peers. Forty risky
(e.g., taking or refusing a drug), forty neutral decisions (e.g., eating a hamburger or a hotdog), and
emotions felt following positive or negative outcomes were examined in 256 early, mid- and late
adolescents, and young adults, evenly distributed. Results showed that emotional ratings to negative outcomes (regret and disappointment) but not to positive outcomes (relief and elation) were
attenuated when feedback was provided. Evidence of development of cognitive decision-making
capacities did also exist, as the capacity to perform faster emotional ratings and to differentially
allocate more resources to the elaboration of emotional ratings when no feedback information
was available increased with age. Overall, we interpret these findings as challenging the traditional
cognitive developmental assumption that development necessarily proceeds from lesser to greater capacities, reflecting the impact of socio-emotional processes that could bias the counterfactual
evaluation of social decision-making outcomes.