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Is Sensation Seeking a Stable Trait or Does it Change Over Time?

NCJ Number
233319
Journal
Journal of Youth and Adolescence Volume: 40 Issue: 1 Dated: January 2011 Pages: 48-58
Author(s)
Sarah D. Lynne-Landsman; Julia A. Graber; Tracy R. Nichols; Gilbert J. Botvin
Date Published
January 2011
Length
11 pages
Annotation
This investigation evaluated trajectories of sensation seeking across middle school in order to evaluate the stability or change in sensation seeking and the implications for prediction of risk behaviors.
Abstract
The theory of sensation seeking has conceptualized this construct as a stable personality trait associated with a variety of problem behaviors. Reckless behavior theory posits that increases in reckless behavior during adolescence can be attributed, in part, to increases in sensation seeking. This study evaluated patterns of stability and change in sensation seeking among 868 urban, minority youth (53 percent female), followed longitudinally across middle school (6th-8th grades). Group-based trajectory analysis identified a stable low group (20 percent), a moderate increasing group (60 percent), and a stable high group (20 percent) each of which demonstrated unique associations with changes in problem behaviors. Stable low sensation seekers reported consistently low levels of aggression, delinquency, and substance use across middle school. Moderate increasing sensation seekers reported significant increases in these risk behaviors over time from levels near zero in the 6th grade. Stable high sensation seekers reported high, stable levels of aggression and delinquency upon entry into middle school as well as significant increases in substance use across middle school. These results lend support to both theories and highlight a need for caution when categorizing adolescents as high or low sensation seekers. (Published Abstract) Tables, figures, and references