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Journal Article

Citation

Teese R, Bradley G. J. Soc. Psychol. 2008; 148(1): 105-126.

Affiliation

School of Psychology, Griffith University, Queensland, Australia.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2008, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.3200/SOCP.148.1.105-128

PMID

18476486

Abstract

Emerging adults--people aged 18-25 years--frequently behave recklessly. This study sheds light on the role of 4 psychosocial predictors of recklessness: (a) impulsivity, (b) peer pressure, (c) perceived risk, and (d) perceived benefits. The authors obtained self-report data from 208 emerging adults. All predictors were significantly correlated, in the expected directions, with 3 forms of reckless behavior: (a) reckless substance use, (b) reckless driving, and (c) reckless sexual behavior. Regression analyses revealed that, controlling for gender, relationship status, and social desirability, impulsivity predicted reckless substance use and sexual practices, peer pressure predicted reckless substance use, perceived risk predicted reckless driving, and perceived benefits predicted all three recklessness types. The authors' psychosocial model of emerging adult recklessness gained additional support from the finding that all 4 predictors explained unique variance in overall recklessness.


Language: en

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