Adolescent Risk Behavior: Differentiating Reasoned And Reactive Risk-taking

被引:0
|
作者
Julie Maslowsky
Olusegun Owotomo
Edward D. Huntley
Daniel Keating
机构
[1] University of Texas at Austin,Department of Kinesiology and Health Education
[2] University of Texas at Austin,Population Research Center
[3] University of Texas at Austin,Department of Population Health, Dell Medical School
[4] University of Michigan,Institute for Social Research
[5] University of Michigan,Department of Psychology
来源
关键词
Risk behavior; Sensation seeking; Future orientation; Working memory; Risk/benefit appraisal;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Although explanatory models of adolescent risk behavior have predominantly focused on adolescents’ limited ability to self-regulate impulsive and/or reward-driven behavior (reactive risk behavior), recent arguments suggest that a significant proportion of adolescent risk behavior may actually be strategic and planned in advance (reasoned risk behavior). The present study evaluates hypothesized predictors of reasoned versus reactive risk behavior using self-reported and neurocognitive task data from a large, diverse adolescent sample (N = 1266 participants; N = 3894 risk behaviors). Participants’ mean age was 16.5 years (SD = 1.1); 56.9% were female, 61.9% White, 17.1% Black, 7.0% Hispanic, and 14.1% other race/ethnicity; 40% were in 10th grade, 60% in 12th grade. As hypothesized, reasoned risk behavior (compared to reactive risk behavior) was associated with higher levels of sensation seeking, better working memory, greater future orientation, and perceiving risk behavior to be more beneficial than risky. These results support the distinction between reasoned and reactive risk behavior as meaningful subtypes of adolescent risk behavior and challenge prevailing frameworks that attribute adolescent risk behavior primarily to poor response inhibition.
引用
收藏
页码:243 / 255
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] "Is Adolescents' risk-taking always negative?": An adolescent-centric perspective of risk-taking
    Tyagi, Kirti
    Singh, Kamlesh
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 2023, 58 : 333 - 334
  • [22] ASSESSMENT OF RISK-TAKING BEHAVIOR
    SLOVIC, P
    [J]. PSYCHOLOGICAL BULLETIN, 1964, 61 (03) : 220 - 233
  • [23] MODIFYING RISK-TAKING BEHAVIOR
    WEST, JD
    FRETZ, BR
    MACDONAL.MJ
    [J]. CHILD DEVELOPMENT, 1970, 41 (04) : 1083 - &
  • [24] Depression, Risk Preferences, and Risk-Taking Behavior
    Cobb-Clark, Deborah A.
    Dahmann, Sarah C.
    Kettlewell, Nathan
    [J]. JOURNAL OF HUMAN RESOURCES, 2022, 57 (05) : 1566 - 1604
  • [25] Effects of mortality risk on risk-taking behavior
    Liu, Liqun
    Rettenmaier, Andrew J.
    [J]. ECONOMICS LETTERS, 2007, 94 (01) : 49 - 55
  • [26] Culture and Context Modify Neural Correlates of Adolescent Risk-Taking Behavior
    Lackner, Christine L.
    Segalowitz, Sidney J.
    [J]. CULTURAL AND CONTEXTUAL PERSPECTIVES ON DEVELOPMENTAL RISK AND WELL-BEING, 2014, : 158 - 179
  • [27] Adolescent Attachment Profiles Are Associated With Mental Health and Risk-Taking Behavior
    Flykt, Marjo
    Vaenskae, Mervi
    Punamaeki, Raija-Leena
    Heikkilae, Lotta
    Tiitinen, Aila
    Poikkeus, Piia
    Lindblom, Jallu
    [J]. FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2021, 12
  • [28] Breaking Confidentiality to Report Adolescent Risk-Taking Behavior by School Psychologists
    Rae, William A.
    Sullivan, Jeremy R.
    Razo, Nancy Pena
    de Alba, Roman Garcia
    [J]. ETHICS & BEHAVIOR, 2009, 19 (06) : 449 - 460
  • [29] Risk-Taking Behavior and Suicidality: The Unique Role of Adolescent Drug Use
    Ammerman, Brooke A.
    Steinberg, Laurence
    McCloskey, Michael S.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF CLINICAL CHILD AND ADOLESCENT PSYCHOLOGY, 2018, 47 (01): : 131 - 141
  • [30] RISK-TAKING AND ETHICAL RISK-TAKING - NO RELATIONSHIP
    HORNE, WC
    [J]. PSYCHOLOGICAL REPORTS, 1972, 30 (02) : 492 - &