Twenty Years After the Iowa Gambling Task: Rationality, Emotion, and Decision-Making
Jong-Tsun Huang
Twenty Years After the Iowa Gambling Task: Rationality, Emotion, and Decision-Making - Frontiers Media SA 2018 - 1 electronic resource (275 p.)
Open Access
The world is full of uncertainty. In unpredictable circumstances, can emotions facilitate advantageous decision-making? A neuroscience team, led by Antonio Damasio, explored this question using the Iowa Gambling Task (IGT). To the present day, the findings of numerous IGT-related investigations strongly influence clinical and interdisciplinary research, for example, in neuroeconomics and neuromarketing. This special issue examines IGT-based research progress over the past 20 years through literature reviews, clinical examinations, model construction, theoretical integration, and brain imaging technology. Both supportive and opposing viewpoints are provided to frame correlations between rationality, emotion, decision-making, and IGT. Potential future directions for IGT studies are discussed
Creative Commons
English
978-2-88945-528-7 9782889455287
10.3389/978-2-88945-528-7 doi
emotion Iowa Gambling Task decision-making ventromedial prefrontal cortex gain-loss frequency reward & punishment rationality expected value somatic marker hypothesis
Twenty Years After the Iowa Gambling Task: Rationality, Emotion, and Decision-Making - Frontiers Media SA 2018 - 1 electronic resource (275 p.)
Open Access
The world is full of uncertainty. In unpredictable circumstances, can emotions facilitate advantageous decision-making? A neuroscience team, led by Antonio Damasio, explored this question using the Iowa Gambling Task (IGT). To the present day, the findings of numerous IGT-related investigations strongly influence clinical and interdisciplinary research, for example, in neuroeconomics and neuromarketing. This special issue examines IGT-based research progress over the past 20 years through literature reviews, clinical examinations, model construction, theoretical integration, and brain imaging technology. Both supportive and opposing viewpoints are provided to frame correlations between rationality, emotion, decision-making, and IGT. Potential future directions for IGT studies are discussed
Creative Commons
English
978-2-88945-528-7 9782889455287
10.3389/978-2-88945-528-7 doi
emotion Iowa Gambling Task decision-making ventromedial prefrontal cortex gain-loss frequency reward & punishment rationality expected value somatic marker hypothesis
