Risk preferences and personality traits in children and adolescents

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Risk preferences and personality traits in children and adolescents. / Piovesan, Marco; Willadsen, Helene.

I: Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, Bind 186, 06.2021, s. 523-532.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Piovesan, M & Willadsen, H 2021, 'Risk preferences and personality traits in children and adolescents', Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, bind 186, s. 523-532. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jebo.2021.04.011

APA

Piovesan, M., & Willadsen, H. (2021). Risk preferences and personality traits in children and adolescents. Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, 186, 523-532. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jebo.2021.04.011

Vancouver

Piovesan M, Willadsen H. Risk preferences and personality traits in children and adolescents. Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization. 2021 jun.;186:523-532. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jebo.2021.04.011

Author

Piovesan, Marco ; Willadsen, Helene. / Risk preferences and personality traits in children and adolescents. I: Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization. 2021 ; Bind 186. s. 523-532.

Bibtex

@article{83981c5721a1494f90fc8a9c0cd10e88,
title = "Risk preferences and personality traits in children and adolescents",
abstract = "We elicit both risk preferences and personality traits of 340 children aged 7–16 and enrolled in Danish schools: we elicit risk preferences using a modified–and simplified–version of the Bomb Risk Elicitation Task, and to measure personality traits we use the HEXACO (parent-report) questionnaire. Our results show that, on average, children are risk averse, become more risk taking with age, and that girls are, on average, more risk averse than boys. On the contrary, personality traits are stable across ages, except for a slight decrease in Openness to Experience. Personality and risk preferences are not correlated either when looking at raw correlations or regressions, including controls. The results suggest that risk preferences and personality traits are complementary measures of individual heterogeneity of behavior.",
keywords = "Behavioral economics, Experiment with children, Personality, Risk preferences",
author = "Marco Piovesan and Helene Willadsen",
note = "Funding Information: We thank the Carlsberg Foundation for generous financial support (Project: 108579). The activities of CEBI are financed by the Danish National Research Foundation, Grant DNRF134. We are grateful to the many colleagues and student assistants have helped us in planning and running this experiment. We thank Ingo Zettler, Paolo Crosetto, Antonio Filippin and the participants of the Social and Biological Roots of Economics Workshop at the Kiel Institute for the World Economy for constructive comments. Funding Information: We thank the Carlsberg Foundation for generous financial support (Project: 108579). The activities of CEBI are financed by the Danish National Research Foundation, Grant DNRF134. We are grateful to the many colleagues and student assistants have helped us in planning and running this experiment. We thank Ingo Zettler, Paolo Crosetto, Antonio Filippin and the participants of the Social and Biological Roots of Economics Workshop at the Kiel Institute for the World Economy for constructive comment Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2021",
year = "2021",
month = jun,
doi = "10.1016/j.jebo.2021.04.011",
language = "English",
volume = "186",
pages = "523--532",
journal = "Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization",
issn = "0167-2681",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Risk preferences and personality traits in children and adolescents

AU - Piovesan, Marco

AU - Willadsen, Helene

N1 - Funding Information: We thank the Carlsberg Foundation for generous financial support (Project: 108579). The activities of CEBI are financed by the Danish National Research Foundation, Grant DNRF134. We are grateful to the many colleagues and student assistants have helped us in planning and running this experiment. We thank Ingo Zettler, Paolo Crosetto, Antonio Filippin and the participants of the Social and Biological Roots of Economics Workshop at the Kiel Institute for the World Economy for constructive comments. Funding Information: We thank the Carlsberg Foundation for generous financial support (Project: 108579). The activities of CEBI are financed by the Danish National Research Foundation, Grant DNRF134. We are grateful to the many colleagues and student assistants have helped us in planning and running this experiment. We thank Ingo Zettler, Paolo Crosetto, Antonio Filippin and the participants of the Social and Biological Roots of Economics Workshop at the Kiel Institute for the World Economy for constructive comment Publisher Copyright: © 2021

PY - 2021/6

Y1 - 2021/6

N2 - We elicit both risk preferences and personality traits of 340 children aged 7–16 and enrolled in Danish schools: we elicit risk preferences using a modified–and simplified–version of the Bomb Risk Elicitation Task, and to measure personality traits we use the HEXACO (parent-report) questionnaire. Our results show that, on average, children are risk averse, become more risk taking with age, and that girls are, on average, more risk averse than boys. On the contrary, personality traits are stable across ages, except for a slight decrease in Openness to Experience. Personality and risk preferences are not correlated either when looking at raw correlations or regressions, including controls. The results suggest that risk preferences and personality traits are complementary measures of individual heterogeneity of behavior.

AB - We elicit both risk preferences and personality traits of 340 children aged 7–16 and enrolled in Danish schools: we elicit risk preferences using a modified–and simplified–version of the Bomb Risk Elicitation Task, and to measure personality traits we use the HEXACO (parent-report) questionnaire. Our results show that, on average, children are risk averse, become more risk taking with age, and that girls are, on average, more risk averse than boys. On the contrary, personality traits are stable across ages, except for a slight decrease in Openness to Experience. Personality and risk preferences are not correlated either when looking at raw correlations or regressions, including controls. The results suggest that risk preferences and personality traits are complementary measures of individual heterogeneity of behavior.

KW - Behavioral economics

KW - Experiment with children

KW - Personality

KW - Risk preferences

U2 - 10.1016/j.jebo.2021.04.011

DO - 10.1016/j.jebo.2021.04.011

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85105255184

VL - 186

SP - 523

EP - 532

JO - Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization

JF - Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization

SN - 0167-2681

ER -

ID: 270065993