Hoarders Only Discount Consumables and Are More Patient for Money

Vickers, Brian D. and Preston, Stephanie D. and Gonzalez, Richard and Angott, Andrea M. (2016) Hoarders Only Discount Consumables and Are More Patient for Money. Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience, 10. ISSN 1662-5153

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Abstract

Individuals with hoarding disorder (HD) excessively acquire and retain goods while also exhibiting characteristics of impulsivity and addiction. However, HD individuals do not always perform impulsively in experiments, they do not appear interested in money, and they exhibit many features of risk-aversion and future-planning. To examine impulsivity in HD, we compared validated community participants high and low in hoarding tendencies on questionnaire measures of hoarding and impulsivity as well as a standard experimental measure of impulsivity (intertemporal discounting) that was modified to compare decisions about money, pens, and snacks. Common discounting effects were replicated. Compared to the low hoarding group, the high hoarding group was more impatient for consumables (pens and snacks) but they were more patient for money. This increased patience for money in high hoarding individuals is in contrast to all other studies on discounting in disordered populations, but consistent with the phenomenology of HD. HD does not appear to be driven by a fundamental inability to wait, but rather a specific, potent desire for consumable rewards.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Bengali Archive > Biological Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@bengaliarchive.com
Date Deposited: 25 Feb 2023 11:29
Last Modified: 24 May 2024 06:52
URI: http://science.archiveopenbook.com/id/eprint/341

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