A Meta-analysis on Age Differences in Risky Decision Making: Adolescents Versus Children and Adults
Overview
Affiliations
Despite evident heightened adolescent risk-taking in real-life situations, not all experimental studies demonstrate that adolescents take more risks than children and adults on risky decision-making tasks. In the current 4 independent meta-analyses, neurodevelopmental imbalance models and fuzzy trace theory were used as conceptual frameworks to examine whether adolescents engage in more risk-taking than children and adults and whether early adolescents take more risks than children and mid-late adolescents on behavioral risk-taking tasks. Studies with at least 1 of the aforementioned age comparisons met the inclusion criteria. Consistent with imbalance models and fuzzy trace theory, results from a random-effects model showed that adolescents take more risks (g = .37) than adults, and early adolescents take more risks (g = .15) than mid-late adolescents. However, inconsistent with both perspectives, adolescents and children take equal levels of risk (g = -.00), and early adolescents and children also take equal levels of risk (g = .04). Meta-regression analyses revealed that, consistent with imbalance models, (a) adolescents take more risks than adults on hot tasks with immediate outcome feedback on rewards and losses; however, contrary to imbalance models but consistent with fuzzy trace theory, (b) adolescents take fewer risks than children on tasks with a sure/safe option. Shortcomings related to studies using behavioral risk-taking tasks are discussed. We suggest a hybrid developmental neuroecological model of risk-taking that includes a risk opportunity component to explain why adolescents take more risks than children in the real world but equal levels of risks as children in the laboratory.
Social and non-social risk-taking in adolescence.
Wang W, Evans K, Schweizer S Sci Rep. 2025; 15(1):6880.
PMID: 40011525 PMC: 11865566. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-025-90050-y.
Li M, Tang D, Pan W, Zhang Y, Lu J, Li H Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci. 2025; .
PMID: 39843826 DOI: 10.3758/s13415-024-01259-9.
Sumiya M, Katahira K, Akechi H, Senju A Mol Autism. 2025; 16(1):3.
PMID: 39819491 PMC: 11740557. DOI: 10.1186/s13229-025-00637-5.
Couture S, Paquette D, Bigras M, Dubois-Comtois K, Lemelin J, Cyr C Res Child Adolesc Psychopathol. 2025; 53(2):235-246.
PMID: 39794675 DOI: 10.1007/s10802-024-01277-8.
Social conformity is a heuristic when individual risky decision-making is disrupted.
Orloff M, Chung D, Gu X, Wang X, Gao Z, Song G PLoS Comput Biol. 2024; 20(12):e1012602.
PMID: 39621793 PMC: 11651703. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1012602.