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Cognitive Control as a Moderator of Temperamental Motivations Toward Adolescent Risk-Taking Behavior.

George J YoussefSarah WhittleNicholas B AllenDan I LubmanJulian G SimmonsMurat Yücel
Published in: Child development (2016)
Few studies have directly examined whether cognitive control can moderate the influence of temperamental positive and negative affective traits on adolescent risk-taking behavior. Using a combined multimethod, latent variable approach to the assessment of adolescent risk-taking behavior and cognitive control, this study examined whether cognitive control moderates the influence of temperamental surgency and frustration on risk-taking behavior in a sample of 177 adolescents (Mage = 16.12 years, SD = 0.69). As predicted, there was a significant interaction between cognitive control and frustration, but not between cognitive control and surgency, in predicting risk-taking behavior. These findings have important implications and suggest that the determinants of adolescent risk taking depend on the valence of the affective motivation for risk-taking behavior.
Keyphrases
  • young adults
  • mental health
  • physical activity
  • genome wide
  • dna methylation