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Journal ArticleDOI

Varieties of impulsivity.

J. L. Evenden
- 01 Oct 1999 - 
- Vol. 146, Iss: 4, pp 348-361
TLDR
Evidence for varieties of impulsivity from several different areas of research, including human psychology, psychiatry and animal behaviour, suggests that several neurochemical mechanisms can influence impulsivity, and that impulsive behaviour has no unique neurobiological basis.
Abstract
The concept of impulsivity covers a wide range of ”actions that are poorly conceived, prematurely expressed, unduly risky, or inappropriate to the situation and that often result in undesirable outcomes”. As such it plays an important role in normal behaviour, as well as, in a pathological form, in many kinds of mental illness such as mania, personality disorders, substance abuse disorders and attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder. Although evidence from psychological studies of human personality suggests that impulsivity may be made up of several independent factors, this has not made a major impact on biological studies of impulsivity. This may be because there is little unanimity as to which these factors are. The present review summarises evidence for varieties of impulsivity from several different areas of research: human psychology, psychiatry and animal behaviour. Recently, a series of psychopharmacological studies has been carried out by the present author and colleagues using methods proposed to measure selectively different aspects of impulsivity. The results of these studies suggest that several neurochemical mechanisms can influence impulsivity, and that impulsive behaviour has no unique neurobiological basis. Consideration of impulsivity as the result of several different, independent factors which interact to modulate behaviour may provide better insight into the pathology than current hypotheses based on serotonergic underactivity.

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Citations
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Developmental Neurocircuitry of Motivation in Adolescence: A Critical Period of Addiction Vulnerability

TL;DR: An exploration of developmental changes in neurocircuitry involved in impulse control has significant implications for understanding adolescent behavior, addiction vulnerability, and the prevention of addiction in adolescence and adulthood.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inhibition and impulsivity: Behavioral and neural basis of response control

TL;DR: This review will review the current models of behavioral inhibition along with their expression via underlying brain regions, including those involved in the activation of the brain's emergency 'brake' operation, those engaged in more controlled and sustained inhibitory processes and other ancillary executive functions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impulsivity, compulsivity, and top-down cognitive control.

TL;DR: The results indicate that the vulnerability to stimulant addiction may depend on an impulsivity endophenotype, and characterize in neurobehavioral and neurochemical terms a rodent model of impulsivity based on premature responding in an attentional task.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impulsivity as a vulnerability marker for substance-use disorders: Review of findings from high-risk research, problem gamblers and genetic association studies

TL;DR: The evidence that impulsivity is associated with addiction vulnerability is reviewed by considering three lines of evidence: studies of groups at high-risk for development of SUDs; studies of pathological gamblers, where the harmful consequences of the addiction on brain structure are minimised, and genetic association studies linking impulsivity to genetic risk factors for addiction.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prefrontal executive and cognitive functions in rodents: neural and neurochemical substrates

TL;DR: It is anticipated that a greater understanding of the prefrontal cortex will come from using tasks that load specific cognitive and executive processes, in parallel with discovering new ways of manipulating the different sub-regions and neuromodulatory systems of the cortex.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Factor structure of the Barratt impulsiveness scale.

TL;DR: The results of the present study suggest that the total score of the BIS-11 is an internally consistent measure of impulsiveness and has potential clinical utility for measuring impulsiveness among selected patient and inmate populations.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Psychobiological Model of Temperament and Character

TL;DR: A psychobiological model of the structure and development of personality that accounts for dimensions of both temperament and character is described, for the first time, for three dimensions of character that mature in adulthood and influence personal and social effectiveness by insight learning about self-concepts.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the law of effect

TL;DR: Experiments on single, multiple, and concurrent schedules of reinforcement find various correlations between the rate of responding and the rate or magnitude of reinforcement, which can be accounted for by a coherent system of equations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Low cerebrospinal fluid 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid concentration differentiates impulsive from nonimpulsive violent behavior

TL;DR: Of the groups studied, impulsive violent offenders who had attempted suicide had the lowest 5HIAA levels, which may be a marker of impulsivity rather than violence.
Journal ArticleDOI

Commitment, choice and self-control

TL;DR: The preference for the large delayed alternative with long durations of T parallels everyday instances of advance commitment to a given course of action and may be seen as a prototype for self-control.
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