A review of risky decision-making in psychosis-spectrum disorders

Clin Psychol Rev. 2022 Feb:91:102112. doi: 10.1016/j.cpr.2021.102112. Epub 2021 Dec 20.

Abstract

The investigation of risky decision-making has a prominent place in clinical science, with sundry behavioral tasks aimed at empirically quantifying the psychological construct of risk-taking. However, use of differing behavioral tasks has resulted in lack of agreement on risky decision-making within psychosis-spectrum disorders, as findings fail to converge upon the typical, binary conceptualization of increased risk-seeking or risk-aversion. The current review synthesizes the behavioral, risky decision-making literature to elucidate how specific task parameters may contribute to differences in task performance, and their associations with psychosis symptomatology and cognitive functioning. A paring of the literature suggests that: 1) Explicit risk-taking may be characterized by risk imperception, evidenced by less discrimination between choices of varying degrees of risk, potentially secondary to cognitive deficits. 2) Ambiguous risk-taking findings are inconclusive with few published studies. 3) Uncertain risk-taking findings, consistently interpreted as more risk-averse, have not parsed risk attitudes from confounding processes that may impact decision-making (e.g. risk imperception, reward processing, motivation). Thus, overgeneralized interpretations of task-specific risk-seeking/aversion should be curtailed, as they may fail to appropriately characterize decision-making phenomena. Future research in psychosis-spectrum disorders would benefit from empirically isolating contributions of specific processes during risky decision-making, including the newly hypothesized risk imperception.

Keywords: Ambiguous; Decision-making; Psychosis; Reward; Risk; Risk-Taking; Schizophrenia; Uncertainty.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Cognition
  • Decision Making
  • Humans
  • Psychotic Disorders*
  • Reward
  • Risk-Taking*