Stress awareness and decision-making under uncertainty: Gender-specific effects of mild hypoxia in the Iowa Gambling Task
S. Pighin, A. Fornasiero, M. Testoni, A. Bogani, N. Bonini, B. Pellegrini, F. Schena, L. Savadori

TL;DR
The study shows that awareness of stress affects how men and women make risky decisions differently under mild hypoxia.
Contribution
It reveals that gender-specific decision-making under stress is driven by conscious stress appraisal, not just physiological effects.
Findings
Males showed increased risk-taking when aware of mild hypoxia.
Females tended to be more cautious when aware of the stressor.
Unaware participants showed similar modest risk-taking increases.
Abstract
Decision-making under uncertainty is a key cognitive function that is sensitive to acute stress. While prior studies have documented gender-specific effects of stress (i.e., typically increased risk-taking in males and greater caution in females), such findings have primarily emerged in conditions where participants were aware of the ongoing stressor. The present study explored whether stress awareness modulates gender differences in risk-taking by manipulating participants’ awareness of being under mild hypoxia (i.e., reduced oxygen availability), a systemic stressor that often goes unnoticed by individuals. Sixty-four participants completed the Iowa Gambling Task (IGT) under normoxic (fraction of inspired oxygen (FiO2) = 20.9%) and mildly hypoxic (FiO2 = 14.1%) conditions, with participants either being informed or uninformed about the stressor. Results indicated that when…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOptimism, Hope, and Well-being · High Altitude and Hypoxia · Heart Rate Variability and Autonomic Control
