Risk Attitude in the DuLong Minority Ethnicity of China

Prospect theory predicts a four-fold risk attitude, which means that people are risk seeking for low-probability gain and high-probability loss and risk averse for low-probability loss and high-probability gain because they overweight probability when it is low. The four-fold pattern of risk attitud...

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Main Authors: Lili Tan, Siyuan Li, Xiaomin Zhang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-02-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.596745/full
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spelling doaj-e986833ee5484731ba816e5de57f42192021-02-18T05:16:10ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782021-02-011210.3389/fpsyg.2021.596745596745Risk Attitude in the DuLong Minority Ethnicity of ChinaLili Tan0Siyuan Li1Xiaomin Zhang2School of Public Administration, Yunnan University, Kunming, ChinaSchool of Public Administration, Yunnan University, Kunming, ChinaSchool of Basic Medicine, Kunming Medical University, Kunming, ChinaProspect theory predicts a four-fold risk attitude, which means that people are risk seeking for low-probability gain and high-probability loss and risk averse for low-probability loss and high-probability gain because they overweight probability when it is low. The four-fold pattern of risk attitude has been supported by several former studies with mainstream industrialized populations but has never previously been tested in a non-industrialized society. In this work, we examined the robustness of the four-fold risk attitude in the DuLong minority ethnicity in China, which is a small society with only 4,000 members that is isolated from modern civilization. We used simple lotteries for gain and loss with different probabilities to elicit the risk attitude of 37 DuLong villagers. Our results support prospect theory predictions in that DuLong people are risk seeking for low-probability gain and risk averse for low-probability loss. However, although they showed a tendency to decrease their degree of risk seeking (risk aversion) for gain (loss), their risk attitude did not reverse when the probability of the prospect increased to 50%. In summary, our results suggest a right-shifted weighting function in this non-industrialized small society. The deviation might be caused by the particular living situation of the DuLong people, their sensitivity to monetary payoffs, and the elicitation procedure.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.596745/fullfour-fold risk attitudeprospect theoryDuLong minority ethnicitychoice-based elicitation procedurenon-industrialized small society
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lili Tan
Siyuan Li
Xiaomin Zhang
spellingShingle Lili Tan
Siyuan Li
Xiaomin Zhang
Risk Attitude in the DuLong Minority Ethnicity of China
Frontiers in Psychology
four-fold risk attitude
prospect theory
DuLong minority ethnicity
choice-based elicitation procedure
non-industrialized small society
author_facet Lili Tan
Siyuan Li
Xiaomin Zhang
author_sort Lili Tan
title Risk Attitude in the DuLong Minority Ethnicity of China
title_short Risk Attitude in the DuLong Minority Ethnicity of China
title_full Risk Attitude in the DuLong Minority Ethnicity of China
title_fullStr Risk Attitude in the DuLong Minority Ethnicity of China
title_full_unstemmed Risk Attitude in the DuLong Minority Ethnicity of China
title_sort risk attitude in the dulong minority ethnicity of china
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Prospect theory predicts a four-fold risk attitude, which means that people are risk seeking for low-probability gain and high-probability loss and risk averse for low-probability loss and high-probability gain because they overweight probability when it is low. The four-fold pattern of risk attitude has been supported by several former studies with mainstream industrialized populations but has never previously been tested in a non-industrialized society. In this work, we examined the robustness of the four-fold risk attitude in the DuLong minority ethnicity in China, which is a small society with only 4,000 members that is isolated from modern civilization. We used simple lotteries for gain and loss with different probabilities to elicit the risk attitude of 37 DuLong villagers. Our results support prospect theory predictions in that DuLong people are risk seeking for low-probability gain and risk averse for low-probability loss. However, although they showed a tendency to decrease their degree of risk seeking (risk aversion) for gain (loss), their risk attitude did not reverse when the probability of the prospect increased to 50%. In summary, our results suggest a right-shifted weighting function in this non-industrialized small society. The deviation might be caused by the particular living situation of the DuLong people, their sensitivity to monetary payoffs, and the elicitation procedure.
topic four-fold risk attitude
prospect theory
DuLong minority ethnicity
choice-based elicitation procedure
non-industrialized small society
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.596745/full
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AT siyuanli riskattitudeinthedulongminorityethnicityofchina
AT xiaominzhang riskattitudeinthedulongminorityethnicityofchina
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