Good Things Come to Those Who Wait: Attenuated Discounting of Delayed Rewards in Aged Fischer 344 Rats
Neurobiology of Aging, Vol. 31, Issue 5, pgs. 853-862, 2010.
Nicholas W. Simon, Candi L. LaSarge, Karienn S. Montgomery, Matthew T. Williams, Ian A. Mendez, Barry Setlow, Jennifer L. Bizon
The ability to make advantageous choices among outcomes that differ in
magnitude, probability, and delay until their arrival is critical for
optimal survival and well-being across the lifespan. Aged individuals
are often characterized as less impulsive in their choices than their
young adult counterparts, demonstrating an increased ability to forgo
immediate in favor of delayed (and often more beneficial) rewards. Such
“wisdom” is usually characterized as a consequence of learning and life
experience. However, aging is also associated with prefrontal cortical
dysfunction and concomitant impairments in advantageous choice
behavior. Animal models afford the opportunity to isolate the effects
of biological aging on decision-making from experiential factors. To
model one critical component of decision-making, young adult and aged
Fischer 344 rats were trained on a two-choice delay discounting task in
which one choice provided immediate delivery of a small reward and the
other provided a large reward delivered after a variable delay period.
Whereas young adult rats showed a characteristic pattern of choice
behavior (choosing the large reward at short delays and shifting
preference to the small reward as delays increased), aged rats
maintained a preference for the large reward at all delays (i.e.,
attenuated “discounting” of delayed rewards). This increased preference
for the large reward in aged rats was not due to perceptual, motor, or
motivational factors. The data strongly suggest that, independent of
life experience, there are underlying neurobiological factors that
contribute to age-related changes in decision-making, and particularly
the ability to delay gratification.
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