Chronic stress skews decision toward high-risk/high-benefit

The time/volatility incentive is an interesting hypothesis. To summarize, you’re equating uncertainty with stress (a reasonable thought). It’s perfectly sensible to maximize the current payoff if the future payouts are less probable.
I think that's kinda been my point as well. If you're stressed (especially, chronically), it's reasonable to expect that you might soon be dead. In which case current payoff is all you care about and risk associated with it doesn't really matter.
 
Just came across this in Cell: http://www.cell.com/cell/fulltext/S0092-8674(17)31239-4

Besides a few interesting neuroscience ideas (I am still working through them), behavioral conclusions were as follows:
(a) chronic stress decreases ability for proper cost-benefit analysis
(b) it increases propensity to chose high risk, high payoff options
I felt that (A) is logical, but (B) was unexpected and contradicts the standard idea of loss aversion.

That is not necessarily a bad thing. Our founding fathers, immigrants and every story that follows the Horatio Algo model shows the success that can follow even life threatening risk.
 
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