The potential relationship between spicy taste and risk seeking

Journal Title: Judgment and Decision Making - Year 2016, Vol 11, Issue 6

Abstract

We conducted three studies to examine the relationship between spicy tastes and risk seeking. In Study 1, results from a personality judgment task indicated that people were more inclined to attribute a higher level of risk seeking to individuals who enjoy spicy foods. The second study examined whether people who like spicy foods are actually more risk seeking. In fact, people who reported a preference for spicy tastes scored higher on risk taking, as assessed via the Domain-Specific Risk-Taking Scale (Chinese version). Finally, Study 3 employed an experimental design to manipulate risk-seeking tendencies by having participants experience spicy food tastes in the lab. Momentarily savoring spicy foods increased participants’ risk taking in the Iowa Gambling Task. The present findings suggest that preferences for spicy tastes could relate to risk-seeking tendencies and subsequent risk-seeking behaviors.

Authors and Affiliations

Xue Wang, Liuna Geng, Jiawen Qin and Sixie Yao

Keywords

Related Articles

Liberal-conservative differences in inclusion-exclusion strategy choice

Inclusion and exclusion strategies for allocation of scarce goods involve different processes. The conditions under which one strategy is chosen in favor of the other, however, have not been fully explicated. In the pres...

Do you look forward to retirement? Motivational biases in pension decisions

This research examines the relationship between positive and negative perceptions of pensions and motivation to engage in the decision process of choosing a private pension plan, as well as satisfaction from the chosen p...

Validation of Pre-Adolescent Decision-Making Competence in Turkish students

The objective of this study was to adapt the Pre-Adolescent Decision-Making Competence Test to Turkish, which was originally developed in English by Weller, Levin, Rose and Bossard (2012) for assessing decision-making co...

The price of gaining: maximization in decision-making, regret and life satisfaction

Maximizers attempt to find the best solution in decision-making, while satisficers feel comfortable with a good enough solution. Recent results pointed out some critical aspects of this decision-making approach and some...

Asymmetric dominance and the stability of constructed preferences

In this research, we explore how experience with an "attraction set" of options, designed to elicit an asymmetric-dominance (attraction) effect, affects choice making in a second "compromise set" designed to elicit a com...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP678266
  • DOI -
  • Views 147
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

Xue Wang, Liuna Geng, Jiawen Qin and Sixie Yao (2016). The potential relationship between spicy taste and risk seeking. Judgment and Decision Making, 11(6), -. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-678266