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Decision-making competence in older adults: A rosy view from a longitudinal investigation
2020
Psychology and Aging
Cross-sectional studies have suggested age-related differences in decision-making competence, but these differences may also reflect cohort-related effects. We present a longitudinal study of age-related changes over 5 years in older adults (aged 60-85) for 3 important aspects of decision-making competence: resistance to framing, applying decision rules, and resistance to sunk costs. The findings show small age-related longitudinal declines in resistance to framing but no decline in applying
doi:10.1037/pag0000443
pmid:31971414
fatcat:rap5tikgjbhobjqsxz7jspnzxi