Dear all,
New Psychology faculty member *Professor Ross Otto *will be giving the first Fall 2016 Cognitive Area Seminar talk next *Friday, September 9th, 3:30 - 5 PM *(Room S3/4, Stewart Biology Building, 1205 Docteur Penfield Avenue). The talk is titled, "Feeling Lucky: Unexpected but Incidental Positive Outcomes Predict Real World Gambling." For a full abstract, see below the dashed line. Please join us at this event!
If you are unable to attend this week's talk, there will be more opportunities. Please see our full talk schedule @: http://www.mcgill.ca/ psychology/events-colloquia-0/brownbag-series.
Looking forward to an exciting semester, and hope that you are able to attend!
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*Feeling Lucky: Unexpected but Incidental Positive Outcomes Predict Real World Gambling*
Ross Otto, Assistant Professor, Department of Psychology, McGill University
Positive mood can affect a person’s tendency to gamble, possibly because positive mood fosters unrealistic optimism. At the same time, unexpected positive outcomes, often called prediction errors, influence mood. However, a linkage between positive prediction errors —the difference between expected and obtained outcomes—and consequent risk taking has yet to be demonstrated. Using a large data set of New York City lottery gambling and a model inspired by computational accounts of reward learning, we found that people gamble more when incidental outcomes in the environment (e.g., local sporting events and sunshine) are better than expected. When local sports teams performed better than expected, or a sunny day followed a streak of cloudy days, residents gambled more. The observed relationship between prediction errors and gambling was ubiquitous across the city’s socioeconomically diverse neighborhoods and was specific to sports and weather events occurring locally in New York City. Our results suggest that unexpected but incidental positive outcomes influence risk taking. Ongoing and future research in this line of work will also be discussed.
Dear all,
Next week's seminar will be rescheduled due to a conflict with a grad orientation event: *Professor Ross' talk will be held on October 21st, 2016.*
Our first talk of the semester will therefore be on September 23rd 2016. Further notice will be sent.
Apologies for any inconvenience.
On Thu, Sep 1, 2016 at 7:34 AM, Anna Zamm anna.zamm@mail.mcgill.ca wrote:
Dear all,
New Psychology faculty member *Professor Ross Otto *will be giving the first Fall 2016 Cognitive Area Seminar talk next *Friday, September 9th, 3:30 - 5 PM *(Room S3/4, Stewart Biology Building, 1205 Docteur Penfield Avenue). The talk is titled, "Feeling Lucky: Unexpected but Incidental Positive Outcomes Predict Real World Gambling." For a full abstract, see below the dashed line. Please join us at this event!
If you are unable to attend this week's talk, there will be more opportunities. Please see our full talk schedule @: http://www.mcgill.ca/psychology/events-colloquia-0/brownbag-series.
Looking forward to an exciting semester, and hope that you are able to attend!
*Feeling Lucky: Unexpected but Incidental Positive Outcomes Predict Real World Gambling*
Ross Otto, Assistant Professor, Department of Psychology, McGill University
Positive mood can affect a person’s tendency to gamble, possibly because positive mood fosters unrealistic optimism. At the same time, unexpected positive outcomes, often called prediction errors, influence mood. However, a linkage between positive prediction errors —the difference between expected and obtained outcomes—and consequent risk taking has yet to be demonstrated. Using a large data set of New York City lottery gambling and a model inspired by computational accounts of reward learning, we found that people gamble more when incidental outcomes in the environment (e.g., local sporting events and sunshine) are better than expected. When local sports teams performed better than expected, or a sunny day followed a streak of cloudy days, residents gambled more. The observed relationship between prediction errors and gambling was ubiquitous across the city’s socioeconomically diverse neighborhoods and was specific to sports and weather events occurring locally in New York City. Our results suggest that unexpected but incidental positive outcomes influence risk taking. Ongoing and future research in this line of work will also be discussed.