Threat to life and risk-taking behaviors: A review of empirical findings and explanatory models

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Abstract

This article reviews the literature focusing on the relationship between perceived threat to life and risk-taking behaviors. The review of empirical data, garnered from field studies and controlled experiments, suggests that personal threat to life results in elevated risk-taking behavior. To account for these findings, this review proposes a number of theoretical explanations. These frameworks are grounded in divergent conceptual models: coping with stress, emotion regulation, replenishing of lost resources through self-enhancement, modifications of key parameters of cognitive processing of risky outcomes, and neurocognitive mechanisms. The review concludes with a number of methodological considerations, as well as directions for future work in this promising area of research.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)109-128
Number of pages20
JournalPersonality and Social Psychology Review
Volume13
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - May 2009

Keywords

  • Coping
  • Disaster
  • Emotion regulation
  • Life threat
  • Risky behavior
  • Stress
  • Trauma

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Social Psychology

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