“…This approach has produced theories asserting that delay discounting (i.e., the preference for sooner, smaller rewards relative to larger, later rewards) should decline with age (Rogers, 1994), increase with age (Trostel and Taylor, 2001), or be minimized in middle age (Read and Read, 2004). Empirical results from psychology and behavioral economics are similarly conflicting (Green et al, , 1996(Green et al, , 1999Harrison et al, 2002;Read and Read, 2004;Chao et al, 2009;Reimers et al, 2009;Whelan and McHugh, 2009;Jimura et al, 2011;Löckenhoff et al, 2011). One important potential contribution to models of intertemporal choice over the life span, which has been overlooked to date, may be that older and younger adults rely differently on the brain systems that underlie valuation of future outcomes.…”