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Personal sense of power predicts financial risk-taking propensity: But only when risk-related decisions are made without cognitive load

Psychology

Personal sense of power predicts financial risk-taking propensity: But only when risk-related decisions are made without cognitive load

K. Sekścińska, D. Jaworska, et al.

An online experimental study (N=192) shows a sense of power boosts financial risk-taking in gambling and investing, while cognitive load reduces risk-taking and neutralizes the power–risk link. Research conducted by Katarzyna Sekścińska, Diana Jaworska, and Joanna Rudzińska-Wojciechowska.... show more
Abstract
A significant relationship between a sense of power and financial risk-taking has been established in the literature. However, the boundary conditions for this relationship remain unclear. This article presents the results of an online experimental study (N=192) that explores the moderating role of cognitive load in the relationship between power and financial risk-taking in the domains of gambling and investing. The findings validate a positive association between a sense of power and financial risk-taking, alongside a negative impact of cognitive load on financial risk. Notably, cognitive load moderates the relationship between power and financial risk-taking in a way that the link is positive when individuals have full access to their cognitive resources, but it becomes nonsignificant when they are under cognitive load.
Publisher
Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology
Published On
Authors
Katarzyna Sekścińska, Diana Jaworska, Joanna Rudzińska-Wojciechowska
Tags
sense of power
financial risk-taking
cognitive load
gambling
investing
moderation effect
online experiment
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