Incidental mood affects decision under uncertainty: findings from an experiment with Nigerian farmers

Abstract Small farmers in low-and-middle-income countries are disproportionately affected by uncertainties under which they have to make decisions. However, decision-making may not be purely rational as it could be influenced by affective or emotional states. Compared to integral mood, there are few...

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Main Authors: Toritseju Begho, Tare Philip Daubry
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer 2024-12-01
Series:Discover Agriculture
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/s44279-024-00132-0
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author Toritseju Begho
Tare Philip Daubry
author_facet Toritseju Begho
Tare Philip Daubry
author_sort Toritseju Begho
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Small farmers in low-and-middle-income countries are disproportionately affected by uncertainties under which they have to make decisions. However, decision-making may not be purely rational as it could be influenced by affective or emotional states. Compared to integral mood, there are few studies investigating whether incidental mood influences farmers’ monetary decisions under uncertainty. This paper applies the Cumulative prospect theory (CPT) model to determine farmers’ attitudes under uncertainty and examines the association with farmers mood, measured by direct elicitation during an experimental session. Participants (farmers) were mostly uncertainty averse in the gain domain. In contrast, farmers were uncertainty-seeking for losses. A one-way ANOVA was conducted to examine the differences between groups in sad, neutral and happy mood states, followed by posthoc tests to determine which groups differed from each other. The results revealed statistically significant differences in uncertainty aversion, loss aversion, and the parameters representing how probabilities are perceived and weighted, i.e., sad, neutral and happy in the gain domain. However, there was an absence of a relationship between incidental mood and several CPT parameters in the loss domain. The paper highlights how understanding the association between mood and attitudes can be harnessed for a better quality of decision-making in various contexts. This finding has important implications for agricultural contexts where farmers often face uncertain outcomes and must make choices that involve potential gains and losses. Since the transfer of incidental moods to decision making is usually done unconsciously, it is crucial to eliminate or reduce the impact of negative moods on decision-making, especially where the outcome is likely to be suboptimal.
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spelling doaj-art-b16b36c331bd4f53a9083da95003b8c42025-08-20T02:31:04ZengSpringerDiscover Agriculture2731-95982024-12-01211910.1007/s44279-024-00132-0Incidental mood affects decision under uncertainty: findings from an experiment with Nigerian farmersToritseju Begho0Tare Philip Daubry1Rural Economy, Environment & Society, Scotland’s Rural College (SRUC)Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural DevelopmentAbstract Small farmers in low-and-middle-income countries are disproportionately affected by uncertainties under which they have to make decisions. However, decision-making may not be purely rational as it could be influenced by affective or emotional states. Compared to integral mood, there are few studies investigating whether incidental mood influences farmers’ monetary decisions under uncertainty. This paper applies the Cumulative prospect theory (CPT) model to determine farmers’ attitudes under uncertainty and examines the association with farmers mood, measured by direct elicitation during an experimental session. Participants (farmers) were mostly uncertainty averse in the gain domain. In contrast, farmers were uncertainty-seeking for losses. A one-way ANOVA was conducted to examine the differences between groups in sad, neutral and happy mood states, followed by posthoc tests to determine which groups differed from each other. The results revealed statistically significant differences in uncertainty aversion, loss aversion, and the parameters representing how probabilities are perceived and weighted, i.e., sad, neutral and happy in the gain domain. However, there was an absence of a relationship between incidental mood and several CPT parameters in the loss domain. The paper highlights how understanding the association between mood and attitudes can be harnessed for a better quality of decision-making in various contexts. This finding has important implications for agricultural contexts where farmers often face uncertain outcomes and must make choices that involve potential gains and losses. Since the transfer of incidental moods to decision making is usually done unconsciously, it is crucial to eliminate or reduce the impact of negative moods on decision-making, especially where the outcome is likely to be suboptimal.https://doi.org/10.1007/s44279-024-00132-0Affective statesBehaviourDecision makingHappyHeuristicsSad
spellingShingle Toritseju Begho
Tare Philip Daubry
Incidental mood affects decision under uncertainty: findings from an experiment with Nigerian farmers
Discover Agriculture
Affective states
Behaviour
Decision making
Happy
Heuristics
Sad
title Incidental mood affects decision under uncertainty: findings from an experiment with Nigerian farmers
title_full Incidental mood affects decision under uncertainty: findings from an experiment with Nigerian farmers
title_fullStr Incidental mood affects decision under uncertainty: findings from an experiment with Nigerian farmers
title_full_unstemmed Incidental mood affects decision under uncertainty: findings from an experiment with Nigerian farmers
title_short Incidental mood affects decision under uncertainty: findings from an experiment with Nigerian farmers
title_sort incidental mood affects decision under uncertainty findings from an experiment with nigerian farmers
topic Affective states
Behaviour
Decision making
Happy
Heuristics
Sad
url https://doi.org/10.1007/s44279-024-00132-0
work_keys_str_mv AT toritsejubegho incidentalmoodaffectsdecisionunderuncertaintyfindingsfromanexperimentwithnigerianfarmers
AT tarephilipdaubry incidentalmoodaffectsdecisionunderuncertaintyfindingsfromanexperimentwithnigerianfarmers