The vagaries of valuation: Post-traumatic growth and psychological responses to gains and losses

Eric Skoog
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Abstract

The experiences of war and trauma have been shown to have many implications for the behavior and attitudes of individuals, including economic and social preferences. It has been argued that this may in part be the result of a process called Post Traumatic Growth (PTG), where individuals exposed to traumatic events experience growth in a number of domains, thereby shifting preferences. However, few studies have actually tested this supposition with field data. I argue that in populations that have experienced trauma such as armed conflict, individuals who experience PTG will display a reduced tendency towards loss-aversion, which individuals in threatening conditions otherwise display. To test my hypotheses, I conduct a survey with over 2000 refugees from the ongoing conflict in Syria, living in the Midyat refugee camp in Mardin, near the Turkish-Syrian border. In addition to reporting individual level trauma, the respondents also complete a hypothetical valuation task. I show that in this conflict-exposed sample, individuals not experiencing PTG displayed stronger responses to losses than to gains. However, individuals with high PTG showed the inverse relationship, with stronger responses to gains than to losses. This has implications for post conflict societies and other contexts where people may have experienced high levels of trauma.

Abstract Image

估价的变幻莫测:创伤后成长和对得失的心理反应
战争和创伤的经历已被证明对个人的行为和态度有许多影响,包括经济和社会偏好。有人认为,这可能部分是创伤后成长(PTG)过程的结果,在这个过程中,经历过创伤性事件的个体在许多领域都会经历成长,从而改变偏好。然而,很少有研究真正用现场数据验证了这一假设。我认为,在经历过武装冲突等创伤的人群中,经历过PTG的人会表现出较低的损失厌恶倾向,而处于威胁条件下的人则会表现出这种倾向。为了验证我的假设,我对来自叙利亚持续冲突的2000多名难民进行了调查,他们住在土耳其-叙利亚边境附近马尔丁的米迪亚特难民营。除了报告个人层面的创伤,受访者还完成了一个假设的评估任务。我展示了在这个暴露于冲突的样本中,没有经历过PTG的个体对损失的反应比对收益的反应更强烈。然而,高PTG的个体表现出相反的关系,对收益的反应比对损失的反应更强烈。这对冲突后社会和人们可能经历高度创伤的其他环境具有影响。
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CiteScore
1.70
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140 days
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