%0 Journal Article %T Risky choice in younger versus older adults: Affective context matters %A Yumi Huang %A Stacey Wood %A Dale Berger %A Yaniv Hanoch %J Judgment and Decision Making %D 2013 %I Society for Judgment and Decision Making %X Earlier frameworks have indicated that older adults tend to experience decline in their deliberative decisional capacity, while their affective abilities tend to remain intact (Peters, Hess, Vastfjall, and Auman, 2007). The present study applied this framework to the study of risky decision-making across the lifespan. Two versions of the Columbia Card Task (CCT) were used to trigger either affective decision-making (i.e., the ``warm'' CCT) or deliberative decision-making (i.e., the ``cold'' CCT) in a sample of 158 individuals across the lifespan. Overall there were no age differences in risk seeking. However, there was a significant interaction between age and condition, such that older adults were relatively more risk seeking in the cold condition only. In terms of everyday decision-making, context matters and risk propensity may shift within older adults depending upon the context. %K decision-making %K dual system %K age difference %K risk taking %K risky choice.NAKeywords %U http://journal.sjdm.org/12/12114/jdm12114.pdf