| Literature DB >> 27050317 |
Morgan Botdorf1, Gail M Rosenbaum1, Jamie Patrianakos1, Laurence Steinberg1,2, Jason M Chein1.
Abstract
While much research on adolescent risk behaviour has focused on the development of prefrontal self-regulatory mechanisms, prior studies have elicited mixed evidence of a relationship between individual differences in the capacity for self-regulation and individual differences in risk taking. To explain these inconsistent findings, it has been suggested that the capacity for self-regulation may be, for most adolescents, adequately mature to produce adaptive behaviour in non-affective, "cold" circumstances, but that adolescents have a more difficult time exerting control in affective, "hot" contexts. To further explore this claim, the present study examined individual differences in self-control in the face of affective and non-affective response conflict, and examined whether differences in the functioning of cognitive control processes under these different conditions was related to risk taking. Participants completed a cognitive Stroop task, an emotional Stroop task, and a risky driving task known as the Stoplight game. Regression analyses showed that performance on the emotional Stroop task predicted laboratory risk-taking in the driving task, whereas performance on the cognitive Stroop task did not exhibit the same trend. This pattern of results is consistent with theories of adolescent risk-taking that emphasise the impacts of affective contextual influences on the ability to enact effective cognitive control.Entities:
Keywords: Cognitive control; adolescence; affect; executive function; risk taking
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27050317 DOI: 10.1080/02699931.2016.1168285
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cogn Emot ISSN: 0269-9931