金融危机

Cortisol and the crunch Scientists link stress hormone to financial crisis

The stress that financial traders suffer during periods of high volatility in the markets reduces their appetite for risk, according to an ingenious study led by Cambridge university neuroscientist and former Wall Street trader John Coates. This may prolong financial crises.

The research, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, combines field and laboratory work. Prof Coates and colleagues discovered that levels of the stress hormone cortisol increased by 68 per cent on average in a group of City of London traders over eight days in which market volatility increased.

The scientists took this finding to Addenbrooke’s Hospital in Cambridge where they used pharmacology – hydrocortisone tablets – to raise cortisol levels in volunteers, also by 68 per cent over eight days. Participants then played an incentivised risk-taking game. Appetite for risk collapsed, by as much as 44 per cent according to one measure, in those with raised cortisol.

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