Stress hormones predict hyperbolic time-discount rates six months later in adults
Taiki Takahashi (1), Mizuho Shinada (1), Keigo Inukai (1,2), Shigehito, Tanida (1), Chisato Takahashi (1), Nobuhiro Mifune (1,2), Haruto Takagishi, (1,2), Yutaka Horita (1,2), Hirofumi Hashimoto (1,2), Kunihiro Yokota (1),, Tatsuya Kameda (1)

TL;DR
This study shows that stress hormone levels can predict future impulsivity in decision-making, with sex-specific effects observed in adults over a six-month period.
Contribution
It is the first to link individual differences in stress hormones with long-term predictions of hyperbolic discount rates in adults.
Findings
Alpha-amylase levels negatively associated with discount rates in never-smokers.
Cortisol negatively related to discount rates in men.
Cortisone positively related to discount rates in women.
Abstract
Objectives: Stress hormones have been associated with temporal discounting. Although time-discount rate is shown to be stable over a long term, no study to date examines whether individual differences in stress hormones could predict individuals' time-discount rates in the relatively distant future (e.g., six month later), which is of interest in neuroeconomics of stress-addiction association. Methods: We assessed 87 participants' salivary stress hormone (cortisol, cortisone, and alpha-amylase) levels and hyperbolic discounting of delayed rewards consisting of three magnitudes, at the time-interval of six months. For salivary steroid assays, we employed a liquid chromatography/ mass spectroscopy (LC/MS) method. The correlations between the stress hormone levels and time-discount rates were examined. Results: We observed that salivary alpha-amylase (sAA) levels were negatively…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDecision-Making and Behavioral Economics · Behavioral Health and Interventions · Neural and Behavioral Psychology Studies
