Two limitations in research examining adolescents' risk cognitions have been the absence of developmental age group comparisons on a breadth of cognitions and the need to better characterize how cognitions influence behavior. To address these limitations, this study compared adolescent (n = 205; 52% female) and young adult (n = 274; 58% female) risk cognitions (risk probability, risk identification, risk tolerance, risk salience, and risk preference) and used variable- and person-centered approaches to explore how cognitions affect problem behavior. Adolescents generally reported lower risk-related cognitions than young adults. Further, risk probability, the cognition typically assessed in research, did not exert an independent effect on be...
Adolescents are known as stereotypical risk-takers, as they engage in disproportionate levels of ris...
This study investigated the influence of personality characteristics and gender on adolescents' perc...
Adolescents are known as stereotypical risk-takers, as they engage in disproportionate levels of ris...
AbstractTwo limitations in research examining adolescents' risk cognitions have been the absence of ...
Research efforts to account for elevated risk behavior among adolescents have arrived at an exciting...
The research described in this thesis aimed to gain insight in risky behavior in adolescence, by exa...
Research efforts to account for elevated risk behavior among adolescents have arrived at an exciting...
© 2012 Dr. George J. YoussefRisk taking behaviours represent one of the leading causes of adolescent...
The special series of articles on adolescent risk taking addresses the discrepancy between laborator...
Adolescent risk taking behavior research rarely takes a decision making perspective. Seventy-one ad...
Researchers of youth risk behavior frequently assume that behavior is volitional; the choice is to e...
ABSTRACT—Trying to understand why adolescents and young adults take more risks than younger or older...
Although the outcomes of our daily-life risky decisions are often unknown (e.g., receiving or not re...
ABSTRACT—Trying to understand why adolescents and young adults take more risks than younger or older...
The present study sought to examine potential differences in risk information processing among diffe...
Adolescents are known as stereotypical risk-takers, as they engage in disproportionate levels of ris...
This study investigated the influence of personality characteristics and gender on adolescents' perc...
Adolescents are known as stereotypical risk-takers, as they engage in disproportionate levels of ris...
AbstractTwo limitations in research examining adolescents' risk cognitions have been the absence of ...
Research efforts to account for elevated risk behavior among adolescents have arrived at an exciting...
The research described in this thesis aimed to gain insight in risky behavior in adolescence, by exa...
Research efforts to account for elevated risk behavior among adolescents have arrived at an exciting...
© 2012 Dr. George J. YoussefRisk taking behaviours represent one of the leading causes of adolescent...
The special series of articles on adolescent risk taking addresses the discrepancy between laborator...
Adolescent risk taking behavior research rarely takes a decision making perspective. Seventy-one ad...
Researchers of youth risk behavior frequently assume that behavior is volitional; the choice is to e...
ABSTRACT—Trying to understand why adolescents and young adults take more risks than younger or older...
Although the outcomes of our daily-life risky decisions are often unknown (e.g., receiving or not re...
ABSTRACT—Trying to understand why adolescents and young adults take more risks than younger or older...
The present study sought to examine potential differences in risk information processing among diffe...
Adolescents are known as stereotypical risk-takers, as they engage in disproportionate levels of ris...
This study investigated the influence of personality characteristics and gender on adolescents' perc...
Adolescents are known as stereotypical risk-takers, as they engage in disproportionate levels of ris...