PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Re-focusing investors' attention away from losses can reduce negative emotional response

2014-12-02
(Press-News.org) COLUMBIA, Mo. - According to a recent report from the Federal Reserve Board, 31 percent of Americans surveyed said they had no retirement savings, and almost half were not actively thinking about planning for retirement. Studies show that many Americans do not invest because they distrust the market and fear financial losses. Now, a University of Missouri researcher has found a way for financial planners to help decrease their clients' worries, which stem from the fear of losing money.

Michael Guillemette, an assistant professor in the MU College of Human Environmental Sciences and a certified financial planner, examined how investors react to financial losses under varying levels of distraction. Participants were tested to see if their investment choices differed when they were asked to remember additional information meant to distract them from those investment decisions.

"In terms of making investment choices, a higher level of distraction didn't matter," Guillemette said. "However, while participants' choices weren't affected, their physiological, or emotional responses to investment losses decreased when they were more distracted. "This shows how physiological loss aversion, or the tendency to react to financial losses more than comparable gains, may be reduced by not focusing on the losses."

Guillemette says it is important for financial planners to make sure they are not beginning client meetings by focusing on the investment performance aspect of a financial plan.

"When a client's financial portfolio is doing well, a financial planner may be inclined to begin the meeting by talking about positive investment returns," Guillemette said. "However, a financial planner should remember that if meetings always begin with a discussion on investments, that clients will expect a similar discussion when their portfolio has experienced losses. This research shows that instead of beginning meetings with discussions on recent investment performance, financial planners should focus on other value-added aspects of financial planning such as estate planning, insurance, taxes and long-term retirement goals."

Guillemette first asked participants to remember numbers that were two or seven digits long before asking them to make investment decisions using small monetary amounts and monitored participants' levels of emotional arousal during the experiment. Guillemette found that participants' investment choices did not change when they were distracted by remembering a higher level of digits. However, participants' emotional responses to investment losses were lower when they were distracted with trying to remember the strings of longer numbers.

Guillemette recommends that investors who do not use financial planners can reduce their emotional responses to losses by simply viewing their investment returns less frequently. He says a one-year portfolio evaluation period has been found to maximize investor satisfaction.

INFORMATION:

The study was published in the Journal of Personal Finance. Guillemette completed the research along with Russell James, professor and CH Foundation chair in personal financial planning at Texas Tech University, and Jeff Larson, associate professor of psychology at the University of Tennessee.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Fear and caring are what's at the core of divisive wolf debate

Fear and caring are whats at the core of divisive wolf debate
2014-12-02
EAST LANSING, Mich. - To hunt or not hunt wolves can't be quantified as simply as men vs. women, hunters vs. anti-hunters, Democrats vs. Republicans or city vs. rural. What's truly fueling the divisive debate is fear of wolves or the urge to care for canis lupis. The social dynamics at play and potential options for establishing common ground between sides can be found in the current issue of the journal PLOS ONE. "People who are for or against this issue are often cast into traditional lots, such as gender, political party or where they live," said Meredith Gore, associate ...

A novel technique for gene insertion by genome editing

A novel technique for gene insertion by genome editing
2014-12-02
Using a novel gene knock-in technique, effective insertion of an exogenous gene was demonstrated in human cells and in animal models, including silkworms and frogs. This strategy universally enables gene knock-in not only in cultured cells, but also in various organisms. Genome editing using programmable nucleases enables homologous recombination (HR)-mediated gene knock-in. HR activity, however, is relatively low in most cultured cells and organisms. This problem presents technical hurdles for the application of HR-mediated knock-in technology in the field of life sciences. ...

Lengthening the life of high capacity silicon electrodes in rechargeable lithium batteries

Lengthening the life of high capacity silicon electrodes in rechargeable lithium batteries
2014-12-02
RICHLAND, Wash. - A new study will help researchers create longer-lasting, higher-capacity lithium rechargeable batteries, which are commonly used in consumer electronics. In a study published in the journal ACS Nano, researchers showed how a coating that makes high capacity silicon electrodes more durable could lead to a replacement for lower-capacity graphite electrodes. "Understanding how the coating works gives us an indication of the direction we need to move in to overcome the problems with silicon electrodes," said materials scientist Chongmin Wang of the Department ...

Logging destabilizes forest soil carbon over time, Dartmouth study finds

Logging destabilizes forest soil carbon over time, Dartmouth study finds
2014-12-02
HANOVER, N.H. - Logging doesn't immediately jettison carbon stored in a forest's mineral soils into the atmosphere but triggers a gradual release that may contribute to climate change over decades, a Dartmouth College study finds. The results are the first evidence of a regional trend of lower carbon pools in soils of harvested hardwood forests compared to mature or pristine hardwood forests. The findings appear in the journal Global Change Biology Bioenergy. A PDF of the study is available on request. Despite scientists' growing appreciation for soil's role in the ...

Missing ingredient in energy-efficient buildings: People

2014-12-02
PULLMAN, Wash. - More than one-third of new commercial building space includes energy-saving features, but without training or an operator's manual many occupants are in the dark about how to use them. Julia Day recently published a paper in Building and Environment showing for the first time that occupants who had effective training in using the features of their high-performance buildings were more satisfied with their work environments. Day did the work as a doctoral student at Washington State University; she is now an assistant professor at Kansas State University. Closed ...

University of Toronto chemists identify role of soil in pollution control

2014-12-02
TORONTO, ON - Scientists have long known that air pollution caused by cars and trucks, solvent use and even plants, is reduced when broken down by naturally occurring compounds that act like detergents of the atmosphere. What has not been well understood until now are the relative contributions of all the processes producing such compounds. A new study, led by University of Toronto atmospheric chemist Jennifer Murphy, shows a key component of the process is the soil beneath our feet. "Pollutants in the atmosphere are broken down by hydroxyl radicals that are produced ...

The ryanodine receptor: Calcium channel in muscle cells

The ryanodine receptor: Calcium channel in muscle cells
2014-12-02
This news release is available in German. VIDEO: Scientists decode the three-dimensional structure of the calcium channel with unprecedented accuracy. Click here for more information. Whenever muscles contract, so-called ryanodine receptors come into play. Calcium ions, which are ultimately responsible for the contraction of muscle cells, are released from storage organs and flow ...

A better look at the chemistry of interfaces

A better look at the chemistry of interfaces
2014-12-02
Researchers working at the Advanced Light Source (ALS) of the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)'s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) have combined key features of two highly acclaimed X-ray spectroscopy techniques into a new technique that offers sub-nanometer resolution of every chemical element to be found at heterogeneous interfaces, such as those in batteries and fuel cells. This new technique is called SWAPPS for Standing Wave Ambient Pressure Photoelectron Spectroscopy, and it combines standing-wave photoelectron spectroscopy (SWPS) with high ambient ...

Tracking elephants, ecstasy, and emerging diseases

2014-12-02
When wild birds are a big part of your diet, opening a freshly shot bird to find worms squirming around under the skin is a disconcerting sight. That was exactly what Victoria Kotongan saw in October, 2012, when she set to cleaning two of four spruce grouse (Falcipennis canadensis) she had taken near her home in Unalakleet, on the northwest coast of Alaska. The next day, she shot four grouse and all four harbored the long, white worms. In two birds, the worms appeared to be emerging from the meat. Kotongan, worried about the health of the grouse and the potential risk ...

NASA sees Tropical Storm Hagupit as Micronesia posts warnings

NASA sees Tropical Storm Hagupit as Micronesia posts warnings
2014-12-02
NASA's Aqua satellite captured a visible picture of Tropical Storm Hagupit in the western North Pacific Ocean on December 2, when several warnings were in effect for islands in Micronesia. Micronesia warnings include a Typhoon Warning for Woleai, Yap and Ngulu in Yap state, a Typhoon Watch posted for Faraulep, Fais and Ulithi in Yap state, and a Tropical Storm Warning for Faraulep in Yap state. When NASA's Aqua satellite passed over Hagupit on Dec. 2 at 03:45 UTC (Dec. 1 at 10:45 p.m. EST) the MODIS instrument took a visible picture of the storm that showed it had become ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

The popular kids in school may be sleeping less

Patients with rheumatoid arthritis have unique and complex autoantibody patterns

Keck Hospital of USC earns an ‘A’ hospital safety grade from The Leapfrog Group 

Survey finds young adults more likely to believe myths about sun protection and skin cancer prevention

Time zones and tiredness strongly influence NBA results, study of 25,000 matches shows

Premature menopause linked to increased musculoskeletal pain and likelihood of sarcopenia

Women are 40% more likely to experience depression during the perimenopause

World’s highest observatory explores the universe

$27 million to map 50 million human cells and uncover genetic fingerprints of disease

Validated rules help prevent overuse of CT scans for diagnosing traumatic head and abdominal injuries in kids

Closing the U.S./Mexico border during COVID-19 increased HIV transmission

Researchers at Houston Methodist find difference in pancreatic cancer cells, offering new hope for immunotherapy effectiveness

Withdrawal of stop-smoking pill could lead to thousands of avoidable deaths

CT-ing is believing: Zeiss Xradia 630 Versa micro-CT scanner supports materials, life sciences research

Breakthrough in complex pain management

Astronomers share climate-friendly meeting solutions

Missing link in species conservation: Pharmacists, chemists could turn tide on plant, animal extinction

Illinois researchers develop an AI model to reduce uncertainty in evapotranspiration prediction

Is it time to retire the best-before date?

An electrifying discovery may help doctors deliver more effective gene therapies

Lurie Children’s Hospital first-in-pediatrics to use technology that lights up lung cancer during surgery

$3.6 million to advance nuclear energy awarded to U-M

Two UT Arlington faculty honored for outstanding research

UT Arlington student links worm behavior to brain disease

Uncovering the secret of long-lived stem cells

The question for online educational platforms: offer courses following a schedule or release them on demand?

Study: racial bias is no 'false alarm' in policing

Ecological Society of America announces 2024 Fellows

Mass General Brigham researchers identify potential drivers of chronic allergic inflammation

Scientists solve chemical mystery at the interface of biology and technology

[Press-News.org] Re-focusing investors' attention away from losses can reduce negative emotional response