Literature DB >> 12365145

Risk-taking behaviour and criminal offending: an investigation of sensation seeking and the Eysenck personality questionnaire.

Sonja Knust1, Anna L Stewart.   

Abstract

This study investigated relationships between hostility, Zuckerman's sensation seeking, and Eysenck and Eysenck's personality scales within a prison population, to explore whether they could be conceptualized in terms of two socialized and unsocialized sensation seeking factors. Participants included 79 incarcerated adult male offenders (age range = 18-62). Findings support the distinction between socialized and unsocialized sensation seeking and suggest that these factors represent more overarching personality factors. Psychoticism was a clear marker of the more broad impulsive, unsocialized sensation seeking factor, rather than representing a supertrait in its own right. This factor was also represented by lie, disinhibition, and boredom susceptibility scales. Findings relating to hostility also supported such a reformulation, as unsocialized scales did cluster together to predict the unsocialized hostility factor, whereas unsocialized scales did not. The results demonstrate the need for a theoretical reformulation of the two given theories of personality.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12365145     DOI: 10.1177/030662402236742

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Offender Ther Comp Criminol        ISSN: 0306-624X


  2 in total

1.  Prospects behind bars: analyzing decisions under risk in a prison population.

Authors:  Thorsten Pachur; Yaniv Hanoch; Michaela Gummerum
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2010-10

2.  Sensation seeking predicts brain responses in the old-new task: converging multimodal neuroimaging evidence.

Authors:  Adam L Lawson; Xun Liu; Jane Joseph; Victoria L Vagnini; Thomas H Kelly; Yang Jiang
Journal:  Int J Psychophysiol       Date:  2012-04-05       Impact factor: 2.997

  2 in total

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