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      Cognition in harsh and unpredictable environments

      , ,
      Current Opinion in Psychology
      Elsevier BV

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          The influence of mortality and socioeconomic status on risk and delayed rewards: a life history theory approach.

          Why do some people take risks and live for the present, whereas others avoid risks and save for the future? The evolutionary framework of life history theory predicts that preferences for risk and delay in gratification should be influenced by mortality and resource scarcity. A series of experiments examined how mortality cues influenced decisions involving risk preference (e.g., $10 for sure vs. 50% chance of $20) and temporal discounting (e.g., $5 now vs. $10 later). The effect of mortality depended critically on whether people grew up in a relatively resource-scarce or resource-plentiful environment. For individuals who grew up relatively poor, mortality cues led them to value the present and gamble for big immediate rewards. Conversely, for individuals who grew up relatively wealthy, mortality cues led them to value the future and avoid risky gambles. Overall, mortality cues appear to propel individuals toward diverging life history strategies as a function of childhood socioeconomic status, suggesting important implications for how environmental factors influence economic decisions and risky behaviors. 2011 APA, all rights reserved
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            Functional and dysfunctional impulsivity: Personality and cognitive correlates.

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              The evolutionary basis of risky adolescent behavior: implications for science, policy, and practice.

              This article proposes an evolutionary model of risky behavior in adolescence and contrasts it with the prevailing developmental psychopathology model. The evolutionary model contends that understanding the evolutionary functions of adolescence is critical to explaining why adolescents engage in risky behavior and that successful intervention depends on working with, instead of against, adolescent goals and motivations. The current article articulates 5 key evolutionary insights into risky adolescent behavior: (a) The adolescent transition is an inflection point in development of social status and reproductive trajectories; (b) interventions need to address the adaptive functions of risky and aggressive behaviors like bullying; (c) risky adolescent behavior adaptively calibrates over development to match both harsh and unpredictable environmental conditions; (d) understanding evolved sex differences is critical for understanding the psychology of risky behavior; and (e) mismatches between current and past environments can dysregulate adolescent behavior, as demonstrated by age-segregated social groupings. The evolutionary model has broad implications for designing interventions for high-risk youth and suggests new directions for research that have not been forthcoming from other perspectives.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Current Opinion in Psychology
                Current Opinion in Psychology
                Elsevier BV
                2352250X
                February 2016
                February 2016
                : 7
                :
                : 76-80
                Article
                10.1016/j.copsyc.2015.08.011
                36951595
                1c830015-755f-43da-b3aa-4ce12d1cc307
                © 2016

                http://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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