Rosenbaum Gail M, Venkatraman Vinod, Steinberg Laurence, Chein Jason M
Department of Psychology, Temple University Weiss Hall, 1701 N. 13 St., Philadelphia, PA 19122.
Department of Marketing, Fox School of Business, Temple University 1801, Liacouras Walk (Alter A562), Philadelphia, PA 19122.
Dev Rev. 2018 Mar;47:23-43. doi: 10.1016/j.dr.2017.09.003. Epub 2017 Oct 19.
Adolescents are known to take more risks than adults, which can be harmful to their health and well-being. However, despite age differences in real-world risk taking, laboratory risk-taking paradigms often do not evince these developmental patterns. Recent findings in the literature suggest that this inconsistency may be due in part to differences between how adolescents process information about risk when it is described (e.g., in a description-based classroom intervention) versus when it is experienced (e.g., when a teenager experiences the outcome of a risky choice). The present review considers areas of research that can inform approaches to intervention by deepening our understanding of risk taking in described or experienced contexts. We examine the literature on the description-experience gap, which has generally been limited to studies of adult samples, but which highlights differential decision making when risk information is described versus experienced. Informed by this work, we then explore the developmental literature comparing adolescent to adult decision making, and consider whether inconsistencies in age-related findings might be explained by distinguishing between studies in which participants learn about decision outcomes through experience versus description. In light of evidence that studies using experience-based tasks more often show age differences in risk taking, we consider the implications of this pattern, and argue that experience-based tasks may be more ecologically valid measures of adolescent risky decision making, in part due to the heightened affective nature of these tasks. Finally, we propose a model to integrate our findings with theories of adolescent risk-taking, and discuss implications for risk-reduction messaging.
众所周知,青少年比成年人更容易冒险,这可能对他们的健康和幸福有害。然而,尽管在现实世界中冒险存在年龄差异,但实验室中的冒险范式往往并未显示出这些发展模式。文献中的最新研究结果表明,这种不一致可能部分归因于青少年在描述风险信息(例如,在基于描述的课堂干预中)与体验风险信息(例如,当青少年体验冒险选择的结果时)时处理风险信息方式的差异。本综述考虑了一些研究领域,这些领域可以通过加深我们对在描述或体验情境中的冒险行为的理解,为干预方法提供参考。我们审视了关于描述 - 体验差距的文献,该文献通常仅限于对成人样本的研究,但它突出了在描述风险信息与体验风险信息时的不同决策方式。基于这项工作,我们接着探讨了将青少年与成人决策进行比较的发展文献,并考虑与年龄相关的研究结果中的不一致是否可以通过区分参与者通过体验还是描述来了解决策结果的研究来解释。鉴于有证据表明,使用基于体验的任务的研究更常显示出冒险行为中的年龄差异,我们考虑这种模式的影响,并认为基于体验的任务可能是青少年冒险决策的更具生态效度的测量方法,部分原因是这些任务具有更强的情感性质。最后,我们提出一个模型,将我们的研究结果与青少年冒险理论相结合,并讨论对降低风险信息传递的启示。