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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Not all high-alexithymia individuals are risk-takers: private self-consciousness moderates the relationship between alexithymia and risk-taking behaviours
Florent LheureuxColette CharloisLaurent Auzoultsubject
Responsible PersonStrategy and Management05 social sciencesGeneral EngineeringGeneral Social Sciencesmedicine.disease050105 experimental psychology030227 psychiatry03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineAlexithymiamedicineSelf-consciousnessEmotion awareness0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesSafety Risk Reliability and QualityPsychologyRisk takingSocial psychologydescription
This article concerns the influence which alexithymia exerts on risk-taking. In particular, alexithymia is seen as a factor which encourages risk-taking as it allows high-alexithymia individuals to feel emotions which are sufficiently intense to compensate for their deficit of emotional awareness. In this connection, we make the hypothesis that alexithymia’s influence is moderated by private self-consciousness (SC). This is because private SC increases the likelihood that high-alexithymia individuals become aware of their risk-taking tendency and that this tendency is discrepant with their pro-safety standards (‘putting someone in danger is bad’) or self-schemas (‘I am a responsible person’). Thus, private SC is likely to enable and motivate them to consciously regulate their behaviour in a safer direction. This hypothesis was empirically tested by a questionnaire amongst 372 French drivers, whose SC, alexithymia, as well as their current adoption of eight risky behaviours (with a more detailed analysis o...
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2016-12-14 | Journal of Risk Research |