This document discusses the relationship between emotions and risk-taking behaviors. It presents the results of two surveys conducted with 91 second-year engineering students measuring their emotions related to financial decisions and perceptions of financial risk. The surveys found that students tend to feel joy after gains but disappointment after losses. They also tend to be moderate risk-takers, with their decisions influenced by emotions in about 35% of cases. A correlation analysis found a weak negative relationship between emotions and risk-taking. The document concludes that risk-taking behaviors are dependent on emotional states.