GENDER, AGE, AND CHILDREN AT HOME INFLUENCE RISKY BEHAVIOR IN ADULTS

Janine M. Ray, Polina Kats-Kariyanakatte, Latrease R. Moore, K. Jacquin
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Abstract

"Extant research in risk-taking and self-harm behaviors has indicated that gender, age, and certain socioeconomic factors are associated with risk-taking behaviors. Our study tested the connection between gender, age, having children at home, and risk-taking behavior among adults. We predicted that having children at home would be associated with reduced risky behavior for both women and men, but more so in women than men. More than 450 (N = 454) American adults (M age = 33.3 years, SD = 11.9) were recruited from Prolific. Participants identified as male (54.4%), female (45.4%) or transgender (0.2%). Ethnicity was self-identified as Caucasian/White (80.4%), African American/Black (7.7%), multiracial (4.4%), Latinx (4%), Asian/Asian American (3.1%), Native American or Alaskan Native (0.2%), and other (0.2%). Participants completed the Risky, Impulsive, and Self-Destructive Behavior Questionnaire (Sadeh & Baskin-Sommers, 2016) to measure engagement in various forms of risky behavior throughout their lifetime including illegal risky behavior and risky sexual behavior. Differences in illegal behavior, risky sexual behavior, and other types of risky behavior were found between men and women, F(3, 441) = 9.09, p < .0001, partial ?2 = .06, with men reporting more risky behavior of all types. ANCOVAs were used to further assess the relationships between gender identity and having children (IVs) and total risky behavior and illegal behavior (DVs); age was covaried. Significant interactions between IVs revealed that male participants with children at home engaged in significantly more risky sexual behavior, F(1, 441) = 4.24, p = .04, overall risky behavior, F(1, 441) = 3.89, p = .049, and illegal behavior, F(1, 441) = 3.59, p = .059, than those without children at home. For women, there was no relationship between having children at home and risky behavior, illegal behavior, or risky sexual behavior. The results may inform parenting education and law enforcement."
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性别、年龄和家中儿童影响成年人的危险行为
“现有的关于冒险和自残行为的研究表明,性别、年龄和某些社会经济因素与冒险行为有关。我们的研究测试了性别、年龄、家里有孩子和成年人冒险行为之间的联系。我们预测,无论对男性还是女性来说,在家生孩子都能减少危险行为,但女性比男性更容易受到影响。从多产地区招募了450多名(N = 454)名美国成年人(M年龄= 33.3岁,SD = 11.9)。参与者被认定为男性(54.4%)、女性(45.4%)或跨性别者(0.2%)。种族自认为白种人/白人(80.4%)、非裔美国人/黑人(7.7%)、多种族(4.4%)、拉丁裔(4%)、亚洲/亚裔美国人(3.1%)、美洲原住民或阿拉斯加原住民(0.2%)和其他(0.2%)。参与者完成了冒险、冲动和自毁行为问卷(Sadeh & Baskin-Sommers, 2016),以衡量他们一生中参与各种形式的危险行为,包括非法危险行为和危险的性行为。男性和女性在非法行为、危险性行为和其他类型的危险行为方面存在差异,F(3,441) = 9.09, p < 0.0001, partial ?2 = 0.06,男性报告的所有类型的危险行为都更多。采用ANCOVAs进一步评估性别认同与生育(IVs)及总危险行为和非法行为(DVs)之间的关系;年龄是共变的。IVs间的显著交互作用表明,家中有儿童的男性参与者的危险性行为(F(1441) = 4.24, p = 0.04)、总体危险性行为(F(1441) = 3.89, p = 0.049)和非法行为(F(1441) = 3.59, p = 0.059)显著高于家中无儿童的男性参与者。对于女性来说,在家生孩子与危险行为、非法行为或危险的性行为之间没有关系。研究结果可以为父母教育和执法提供参考。”
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