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result(s) for
"Impulsiveness"
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COVID-19-Related Social Isolation Predispose to Problematic Internet and Online Video Gaming Use in Italy
by
Orsolini, Laura
,
Carmassi, Claudia
,
Pompili, Maurizio
in
Addictive behaviors
,
Adult
,
Behavior, Addictive - epidemiology
2022
COVID-19 pandemic and its related containment measures have been associated with increased levels of stress, anxiety and depression in the general population. While the use of digital media has been greatly promoted by national governments and international authorities to maintain social contacts and healthy lifestyle behaviors, its increased access may also bear the risk of inappropriate or excessive use of internet-related resources. The present study, part of the COVID Mental hEalth Trial (COMET) study, aims at investigating the possible relationship between social isolation, the use of digital resources and the development of their problematic use. A cross sectional survey was carried out to explore the prevalence of internet addiction, excessive use of social media, problematic video gaming and binge watching, during Italian phase II (May–June 2020) and III (June–September 2020) of the pandemic in 1385 individuals (62.5% female, mean age 32.5 ± 12.9) mainly living in Central Italy (52.4%). Data were stratified according to phase II/III and three groups of Italian regions (northern, central and southern). Compared to the larger COMET study, most participants exhibited significant higher levels of severe-to-extremely-severe depressive symptoms (46.3% vs. 12.4%; p < 0.01) and extremely severe anxiety symptoms (77.8% vs. 7.5%; p < 0.01). We also observed a rise in problematic internet use and excessive gaming over time. Mediation analyses revealed that COVID-19-related general psychopathology, stress, anxiety, depression and social isolation play a significant role in the emergence of problematic internet use, social media addiction and problematic video gaming. Professional gamers and younger subjects emerged as sub-populations particularly at risk of developing digital addictions. If confirmed in larger and more homogenous samples, our findings may help in shedding light on possible preventive and treatment strategies for digital addictions.
Journal Article
Heightened D3 dopamine receptor levels in cocaine dependence and contributions to the addiction behavioral phenotype: a positron emission tomography study with 11C-+-PHNO
2014
The dopamine system is a primary treatment target for cocaine dependence (CD), but research on dopaminergic abnormalities (eg, D2 receptor system deficiencies) has so far failed to translate into effective treatment strategies. The D3 receptor system has recently attracted considerable clinical interest, and D3 antagonism is now under investigation as a novel avenue for addiction treatment. The objective here was to evaluate the status and behavioral relevance of the D3 receptor system in CD, using the positron emission tomography (PET) radiotracer [(11)C]-(+)-PHNO. Fifteen CD subjects (many actively using, but all abstinent 7-240 days on scan day) and fifteen matched healthy control (HC) subjects completed two PET scans: one with [(11)C]-(+)-PHNO to assess D3 receptor binding (BPND; calculated regionally using the simplified reference tissue model), and for comparison, a second scan with [(11)C]raclopride to assess D2/3 binding. CD subjects also completed a behavioral battery to characterize the addiction behavioral phenotype. CD subjects showed higher [(11)C]-(+)-PHNO BPND than HC in the substantia nigra, which correlated with behavioral impulsiveness and risky decision making. In contrast, [(11)C]raclopride BPND was lower across the striatum in CD, consistent with previous literature in 2 week abstinence. The data suggest that in contrast to a D2 deficiency, CD individuals may have heightened D3 receptor levels, which could contribute to addiction-relevant traits. D3 upregulation is emerging as a biomarker in preclinical models of addiction, and human PET studies of this receptor system can help guide novel pharmacological strategies for treatment.The dopamine system is a primary treatment target for cocaine dependence (CD), but research on dopaminergic abnormalities (eg, D2 receptor system deficiencies) has so far failed to translate into effective treatment strategies. The D3 receptor system has recently attracted considerable clinical interest, and D3 antagonism is now under investigation as a novel avenue for addiction treatment. The objective here was to evaluate the status and behavioral relevance of the D3 receptor system in CD, using the positron emission tomography (PET) radiotracer [(11)C]-(+)-PHNO. Fifteen CD subjects (many actively using, but all abstinent 7-240 days on scan day) and fifteen matched healthy control (HC) subjects completed two PET scans: one with [(11)C]-(+)-PHNO to assess D3 receptor binding (BPND; calculated regionally using the simplified reference tissue model), and for comparison, a second scan with [(11)C]raclopride to assess D2/3 binding. CD subjects also completed a behavioral battery to characterize the addiction behavioral phenotype. CD subjects showed higher [(11)C]-(+)-PHNO BPND than HC in the substantia nigra, which correlated with behavioral impulsiveness and risky decision making. In contrast, [(11)C]raclopride BPND was lower across the striatum in CD, consistent with previous literature in 2 week abstinence. The data suggest that in contrast to a D2 deficiency, CD individuals may have heightened D3 receptor levels, which could contribute to addiction-relevant traits. D3 upregulation is emerging as a biomarker in preclinical models of addiction, and human PET studies of this receptor system can help guide novel pharmacological strategies for treatment.
Journal Article
Toward a Taxonomy of Dark Personalities
by
Paulhus, Delroy L.
in
Biological and medical sciences
,
Empathy
,
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
2014
The term dark personalities refers to a set of socially aversive traits in the subclinical range. Not extreme enough to invite clinical or forensic attention, they can get along (even flourish) in everyday work settings, scholastic settings, and the broader community. Along with my research group, I have studied a constellation of these personalities—Machiavellianism, narcissism, psychopathy, and everyday sadism—under the label \"Dark Tetrad.\" We have argued that, because of their overlap, these four traits should be studied in concert. Recently developed inventories now facilitate identification of the unique contributions of each trait. The present review highlights key advances and controversies emerging from work on these malevolent, yet fascinating, characters.
Journal Article
Online reviews and impulse buying behavior: the role of browsing and impulsiveness
2018
Purpose
Online reviews have shown important information that affects consumers’ online shopping behavior. However, little research has examined how they may influence consumers’ online impulse buying behavior. The purpose of this paper is to bring theoretical and empirical connections between them.
Design/methodology/approach
The framework of this study was tested on three popular online group shopping websites in China (ju.taobao.com, dianping.com, and meituan.com). An online survey with 315 participants who had experience using these websites was recruited to verify the effects of consumers’ perceived value from reading online reviews on urge to buy impulsively and impulse buying behavior.
Findings
The empirical findings show that consumers’ perceived utilitarian and hedonic value from reading online reviews enhance their browsing behavior. Browsing positively affects consumers’ urge to buy impulsively and finally affects their impulse buying behavior. Further, this study finds that consumers with high impulsiveness focus more on hedonic value of online reviews, whereas consumers with low impulsiveness put more emphasis on utilitarian value. Browsing demonstrates a stronger effect on urge to buy impulsively for consumers with high impulsiveness.
Originality/value
This study is one of the early studies to investigate the relationship between social influence (e.g. influence of online reviews) and impulse buying. It draws upon the perspectives of browsing and consumer’s perceived value from the literature. This research also considers consumer differences regarding the level of impulsiveness.
Journal Article
The “vicious cycle”: Indirect aggression perpetration and victimization and their links to the dark triad and temperamental traits
2025
Indirect aggression is a sophisticated form of aggression with documented links to the Dark Triad of personality traits: Machiavellianism, narcissism, and psychopathy. Indirect aggression is predominately studied in adolescent populations despite its prevalent use by adults. Notably, young adults are not only frequent perpetrators of indirect aggression but also common targets. Despite this, few studies have examined whether these two behaviours occur simultaneously nor explored whether personality and temperamental traits characterize their co-occurrence. This study employed finite mixture modelling to identify profiles based on indirect aggression, defined by acts of both perpetration and victimization, among 471 young adults (51.8% women, 27.8% White, M age = 18.54 years, SD age = 1.65). The best fitting model yielded three classes: (a) a high perpetration and high victimization group (42.9%); (b) a moderate perpetration and moderate victimization group (38.6%); and (c) a low perpetration and low victimization group (18.5%). Members of the “high–high” group exhibited significantly higher levels of Machiavellianism, narcissism, psychopathy, and impulsivity as compared to the “moderate–moderate” and “low–low” groups. Gender did not predict class membership. These findings underscore the interconnected nature of perpetration and victimization and highlight the role of personality traits, particularly the Dark Triad and impulsivity, in distinguishing classes. We suggest that the use of indirect aggression may be driven by the Dark Triad traits to achieve and maintain social status, which offers a strategic advantage by enhancing social capital. We also discussed the diverse ways in which impulsivity may increase the risk for both perpetration and victimization. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2026 APA, all rights reserved) (Source: journal abstract)
Journal Article
Towards the measurement of food literacy with respect to healthy eating: the development and validation of the self perceived food literacy scale among an adult sample in the Netherlands
2018
Background
Food literacy refers to the capability to make healthy food choices in different contexts, settings and situations. The aim of this study is to develop and validate the self-perceived food literacy (SPFL) scale, to assess individuals’ level of food literacy, including a knowledge, skills and behavior to plan, manage, select, prepare and eat food healthfully.
Methods
An initial set of 50 items for the SPFL scale were generated based on expert insights and literature. A cross-sectional online survey was conducted among a sample of Dutch adults (
n
= 755) in order to determine convergent, divergent and criterion validation against psychosocial variables that were expected to correlate with food literacy (self-control, impulsiveness) and against the expected outcome of high food literacy, namely healthy food consumption. Principal Component Analyses (PCA), Pearson correlation tests and linear regression analyses were conducted. The capacity to distinguish of the SPFL scale was determined by comparing SPFL scores of the general population with that of a sample of dieticians (
n
= 207).
Results
The participants in the general sample had an average age of 44.8 (SD:16.1), the majority were women (90.7%), they had a healthy weight (61.4%) and were highly educated (59.1%). Of the initial 50 items, 29 items remained after PCA and reflected eight domains of food literacy. SPFL was positively correlated with self-control (
r
= 0.51,
p
= <.001) and negatively with impulsiveness (
r
= − 0.31,
p
= <.01). Participants with higher levels of food literacy reported a significantly higher frequency of fruit consumption (≥5 times/week), vegetable consumption (≥5times/week) and fish consumption (≥1times/week) and consumed larger portions of fruit (≥2pieces/day) and vegetables ≥200 g/day) in comparison with participants who had lower levels of food literacy. Dieticians had slightly higher scores on SPFL than general adults (B = 0.08, SE = 0.03,
t
= 2.83, 95%-CI = 0.03 to 0.14).
Conclusions
The 29 item SPFL scale is a validated, expert-based and theory-driven tool for measuring self-perceived food literacy with respect to healthy eating among adults. Higher levels of food literacy were associated with more self-control, less impulsiveness and healthier food consumption. Additional research is needed to validate the SPFL scale in different populations (different age groups, socioeconomic groups, male populations) and in different contexts.
Journal Article
Willpower with and without effort
2020
Most authors who discuss willpower assume that everyone knows what it is, but our assumptions differ to such an extent that we talk past each other. We agree that willpower is the psychological function that resists temptations – variously known as impulses, addictions, or bad habits; that it operates simultaneously with temptations, without prior commitment; and that use of it is limited by its cost, commonly called effort, as well as by the person's skill at executive functioning. However, accounts are usually not clear about how motivation functions during the application of willpower, or how motivation is related to effort. Some accounts depict willpower as the perceiving or formation of motivational contingencies that outweigh the temptation, and some depict it as a continuous use of mechanisms that interfere with re-weighing the temptation. Some others now suggest that impulse control can bypass motivation altogether, although they refer to this route as habit rather than willpower. It is argued here that willpower should be recognized as either or both of two distinct functions, which can be called resolve and suppression. Resolve is based on interpretation of a current choice as a test case for a broader set of future choices, which puts at stake more than the outcome of the current choice. Suppression is inhibiting valuation of (modulating) and/or keeping attention from (filtering) immediate alternatives to a current intention. Perception of current choices as test cases for broader outcomes may result in reliable preference for these outcomes, which is experienced as an effortless habit – a successful result of resolve, not an alternative method of self-control. Some possible brain imaging correlates are reviewed.
Journal Article
Impulsivity in Male Episodic Cluster Headache
Background: Cluster headache (CH) is the most prevalent trigeminal‐autonomic cephalalgia. Research evidence supports the hypothesized involvement of the posterior hypothalamus, the trigeminal‐vascular system, and other central pain‐processing regions in the pathogenesis of pain. Because of the role of the hypothalamus, CH patients should be at greater risk of developing an altered emotional response. Impulsivity is associated with depression, bipolar disorders, suicide attempts, and addictive disorders, which can be frequent in CH. Objective: Our objective is to evaluate the prevalence of impulsivity in CH patients. Methods: This is a cross‐sectional observational study. Barratt Impulsiveness Scale (BIS‐11) was administered to evaluate impulsivity. Results: Fifty CH patients outside the bout and 60 matched controls were included. Patients were recruited from an outpatient headache unit. The percentage of episodic CH patients with a diagnosis of impulsivity (BIS‐11 ≥ 73) was 14.2% compared to 1.6% in the control group ( p = 0.02). The mean score on the BIS‐11 was 58.5 (SD: 14.3) in the case group and 57.1 (SD: 9.2) in the control group. Although the global score on the scale did not differ between both groups, there were differences in cognitive (16.2 [SD: 4.4] vs. 14.5 [SD: 3.5]; p = 0.01) but not in motor and nonplanning impulsivity. Conclusion: Our findings suggest that CH patients have greater cognitive impulsivity. If impulsivity plays an important role in the risk of suicide and substance use disorders, early detection and an effective multidisciplinary management could reduce CH‐related burden and impact.
Journal Article
Facial Width-to-Height Ratio Does Not Predict Self-Reported Behavioral Tendencies
2017
A growing number of studies have linked facial width-to-height ratio (fWHR) with various antisocial or violent behavioral tendencies. However, those studies have predominantly been laboratory based and low powered. This work reexamined the links between fWHR and behavioral tendencies in a large sample of 137,163 participants. Behavioral tendencies were measured using 55 well-established psychometric scales, including self-report scales measuring intelligence, domains and facets of the five-factor model of personality, impulsiveness, sense of fairness, sensational interests, self-monitoring, impression management, and satisfaction with life. The findings revealed that fWHR is not substantially linked with any of these self-reported measures of behavioral tendencies, calling into question whether the links between fWHR and behavior generalize beyond the small samples and specific experimental settings that have been used in past fWHR research.
Journal Article
Spent Resources: Self‐Regulatory Resource Availability Affects Impulse Buying
by
Faber, Ronald J.
,
Vohs, Kathleen D.
in
Buying behavior
,
Cognitive models
,
Commercial regulation
2007
This research investigated impulse buying as resulting from the depletion of a common—but limited—resource that governs self‐control. In three investigations, participants’ self‐regulatory resources were depleted or not; later, impulsive spending responses were measured. Participants whose resources were depleted, relative to participants whose resources were not depleted, felt stronger urges to buy, were willing to spend more, and actually did spend more money in unanticipated buying situations. Participants having depleted resources reported being influenced equally by affective and cognitive factors and purchased products that were high on each factor at equal rates. Hence, self‐regulatory resource availability predicts whether people can resist impulse buying temptations.
Journal Article