Ania Aïte
Paris Descartes University
11 Papers
18 Citations
Ania Aïte is an academic researcher from Paris Descartes University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Context (language use) & Iowa gambling task. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 9 publications. Previous affiliations of Ania Aïte include Institut Universitaire de France & University of Paris.
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Papers
Positive emotional context eliminates the framing effect in decision-making.
TL;DR: The results revealed that the presentation framed in terms of gain or loss no longer affected subjects' decision-making following specific exposure to emotionally pleasant pictures, and confirmed that a positive emotional context can reduce loss aversion.
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What have we learned about the processes involved in the Iowa Gambling Task from developmental studies
TL;DR: Developmental studies using the Iowa Gambling Task or child-friendly adaptations of the IGT are reviewed to show how these findings provide a better understanding of the processes involved in decision-making under uncertainty.
Adolescents’ inhibitory control: keep it cool or lose control
Ania Aïte,Mathieu Cassotti,Mathieu Cassotti,Adriano Linzarini,Anaïs Osmont,Olivier Houdé,Olivier Houdé,Grégoire Borst,Grégoire Borst +8 more
TL;DR: The present study suggests that cool and hot inhibitory control abilities develop differently from childhood to adulthood - i.e., that cool inhibition follows a linear developmental pattern and hot inhibition follows an adolescent-specific pattern - and that they become progressively more domain-specific with age.
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Relationship between pathological gambling, alexithymia, and gambling type
Céline Bonnaire,Servane Barrault,Ania Aïte,Mathieu Cassotti,Sylvain Moutier,Isabelle Varescon +5 more
TL;DR: After controlling for being or not depressed, PGs have significantly higher alexithymia scores, and in non-strategic PGs, specific psychotherapeutic techniques like body-centered psychotherapy could help them to differentiate feelings from bodily sensations.
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Is human decision making under ambiguity guided by loss frequency regardless of the costs? A developmental study using the Soochow Gambling Task
Ania Aïte,Mathieu Cassotti,Mathieu Cassotti,Sandrine Rossi,Nicolas Poirel,Nicolas Poirel,Amélie Lubin,Olivier Houdé,Olivier Houdé,Sylvain Moutier +9 more
TL;DR: The analysis of strategic adjustments following gains and losses reveals that adults switch less often after losses compared with children and adolescents, suggesting that psychological tolerance to loss may facilitate learning the characteristics of each option and improve the ability to choose advantageously.
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