학술논문

Unique and interactive effects of impulsivity facets on reckless driving and driving under the influence in a high-risk young adult sample
Document Type
article
Source
Subject
Social and Personality Psychology
Psychology
Behavioral and Social Science
Prevention
Mental Health
Drug Abuse (NIDA only)
Basic Behavioral and Social Science
Clinical Research
Pediatric
Substance Misuse
Good Health and Well Being
Urgency
Premeditation
Perseverance
Sensation seeking
Reckless driving
Driving under the influence
High-risk sample
Moderation
driving under the influence
high-risk sample
moderation
perseverance
premeditation
reckless driving
sensation seeking
urgency
Cognitive Sciences
Social Psychology
Biological psychology
Social and personality psychology
Language
Abstract
Risky driving behaviors are disproportionately high among young adults and impulsivity is a robust risk factor. Recent conceptualizations have proposed multidimensional facets of impulsivity comprised of negative urgency, premeditation, perseverance, sensation seeking, and positive urgency (UPPS-P model). Prior studies have found these facets are associated with risky driving behaviors in college student samples, but no prior studies have examined these facets in clinical samples. This study examined the unique and interactive effects of UPPS-P impulsivity facets on past-year risky driving behaviors in a sample of high-risk young adults (ages 18-30 years) with a history of substance use and antisocial behavior and their siblings (n=1,100). Multilevel Poisson regressions indicated that sensation seeking and negative urgency were uniquely and positively associated with both frequency of past-year reckless driving and driving under the influence. Moreover, lack of premeditation was uniquely and positively associated with reckless driving, whereas lack of perseverance was uniquely and positively associated with driving under the influence. Furthermore, lack of premeditation moderated and strengthened the positive association between sensation seeking and driving under the influence. These study findings suggest that assessing multiple facets of trait impulsivity could facilitate targeted prevention efforts among young adults with a history of externalizing psychopathology.