| Literature DB >> 30857528 |
Myriam Haas1,2, Andreas Hiemisch2, Mandy Vogel1,2, Oleg Wagner1, Wieland Kiess1,2, Tanja Poulain3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The present study investigates whether sensation seeking in pre-school-age children is associated with age, gender and socio-economic status, and how sensation seeking relates to behavioural difficulties.Entities:
Keywords: Behavioural difficulties; Children; Sensation seeking; Socio-economic status
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30857528 PMCID: PMC6410503 DOI: 10.1186/s12887-019-1450-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pediatr ISSN: 1471-2431 Impact factor: 2.125
Sensation Seeking Scale for Young Children (SSSYC): mean (M) and standard deviation (SD) values by age and gender for N = 423 children aged 3 to 6
| SSSYC overall | NS | BI | TS | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | Gender | N | M | SD | M | SD | M | SD | M | SD |
| all | male | 217 | 12.52 | (4.06) | 3.52 | (1.86) | 2.98 | (1.62) | 6.03 | (2.01) |
| female | 206 | 11.24 | (4.26) | 3.56 | (1.82) | 2.84 | (1.82) | 4.84 | (2.04) | |
| 3.5–4.4 | male | 111 | 11.85 | (4.35) | 3.30 | (2.03) | 2.85 | (1.65) | 5.70 | (2.10) |
| female | 92 | 10.51 | (4.34) | 3.12 | (1.94) | 2.76 | (1.82) | 4.62 | (2.05) | |
| 4.5–5.4 | male | 57 | 12.95 | (3.62) | 3.44 | (1.59) | 3.13 | (1.54) | 6.37 | (1.87) |
| female | 51 | 11.47 | (4.03) | 3.78 | (1.69) | 2.73 | (1.67) | 4.96 | (2.12) | |
| 5.5–6.5 | male | 49 | 13.54 | (3.64) | 4.11 | (1.67) | 3.07 | (1.67) | 6.36 | (1.85) |
| female | 63 | 12.14 | (4.20) | 4.02 | (1.61) | 3.05 | (1.95) | 5.07 | (1.95) | |
Age in years, NS Novelty Seeking, BI Behavioural Intensity, TS Thrill Seeking
Associations between scores on the different scales of the SSSYC and gender, age, and SES values
|
|
|
| ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SSYC Total | Gender | −.162 | −1.35 | .001 |
| Age | .169 | 0.82 | .001 | |
| SES | .026 | 0.03 | .596 | |
| NS | Gender | .000 | 0.00 | .993 |
| Age | .188 | 0.40 | .000 | |
| SES | .043 | 0.02 | .383 | |
| BI | Gender | −.036 | −0.12 | .464 |
| Age | .069 | 0.13 | .167 | |
| SES | .006 | 0.00 | .905 | |
| TS | Gender | −.291 | −1.23 | <.001 |
| Age | .116 | 0.28 | .015 | |
| SES | .009 | 0.00 | .848 | |
NS Novelty Seeking, BI Behavioural Intensity, TS Thrill Seeking, β = standardised regression coefficient, b = non-standardised regression coefficient, level of significance p < 0.05. Socio-economic status was not found to be related to sensation seeking in children. Associations were found between age and gender values and sensation seeking, whereby male and older children tend to score higher on the sensation seeking scale
Fig. 1Gender-specific effect plot illustrating the estimated overall SSSYC score (+ confidence interval) depending on age. 3- to 6-year-old boys scored higher on the overall sensation seeking scale than girls
Fig. 2Scatterplot illustrating the independence of the overall SSSYC score in relation to SES. Sensation seeking and the socio-economic status were not related in our study sample
Associations between scores on the different scales of the SSSYC and behavioural difficulties
| SDQ | Emotional symptoms | Conduct problems | Hyperactivity/inattention | Peer relationship problems | Pro-social behaviour | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SSSYC Total |
| −.293 | .190 | .077 | −.110 | .073 |
|
| −.689 | .534 | .132 | −.311 | .195 | |
| p | <.001 | .001 | .169 | .031 | .161 | |
| NS |
| −.120 | .102 | −.062 | −.010 | .094 |
|
| −.123 | .125 | −.047 | −.012 | .110 | |
|
| .021 | .092 | .289 | .854 | .090 | |
| BI |
| −.251 | .172 | .103 | −.193 | .025 |
|
| −.240 | .196 | .072 | −.223 | .027 | |
|
| <.001 | .003 | .072 | <.001 | .634 | |
| TS |
| −.275 | .149 | .123 | −.053 | .042 |
|
| −.325 | .211 | .107 | −.075 | .056 | |
|
| <.001 | .008 | .026 | .294 | .412 |
NS Novelty Seeking, BI Behavioural Intensity, TS Thrill Seeking, β = standardised regression coefficient, b = non- standardised regression coefficient, level of significance p < 0.05. Higher sensation seeking is associated with conduct problems, whereas lower sensation seeking is related to emotional symptoms and peer-relationship problems