Adrenaline Junkies Interpersonal Relationship

Adrenaline Junkies Interpersonal Relationship

Researching Template Source No:

Aziz, Maria, and Sumaira Rashid. “Risk Taking Behavior and Interpersonal Relationship of Adrenaline Junkies: A Qualitative Study.” Indian Journal of Health & Wellbeing, vol. 9, no. 3, Mar. 2018, pp. 384–391. Academic Search Complete. http://web.b.ebscohost.com.libaccess.hccs.edu:2048/ehost/detail/detail?vid=10&sid=bf28e7ae-c962-4706-9549-656c863e7cab%40sessionmgr120&bdata=JnNpdGU9ZWhvc3QtbGl2ZSZzY29wZT1zaXRl#AN=129285040&db=a9h

Which research points does this source support?

  1. Helps define the interpersonal relationship with adrenaline junkies
  2. Helps explain the different behaviors they could of took instead of that one
  3. Helps understand the true meaning behind risk taking behavior

15 Ideas

  1. Adrenaline junkies say most people look at them in a wrong way (Aziz 385).
  2. Adrenaline junkies choose dangerous activities over a loved one that can harm them (Aziz 385).
  3. Adrenaline junkies have a lot of issues with parents regarding what they do (Aziz 385).
  4. Despite knowing the things they do are life threating they don’t want to stop doing it (Aziz 385).
  5. Risk taking behavior means performing a task that is very hard to achieve because its hazardous (Aziz 385).
  6. Can also be a practice on a certain action whose outcome can bring a threat (Aziz 385).
  7. Interpersonal relationship is used to describe an association between 2 individuals (Aziz 385).
  8. A study that concluded young adults having higher levels of discriminant attitude (Aziz 385).
  9. Happiness and excitement in extreme activities are what motivates adrenaline junkies (Aziz 385).
  10. Adrenaline junkies are risk takers when it comes to their lives (Aziz 385).
  11. Adrenaline junkie’s last concern is death (Aziz 385).
  12. As they grow older even get married and see many accidents it reduces the number of risk behaviors (Aziz 385).
  13. Some activities include mountain climbing, paragliding, one wheeling using motor bike and diving in a sea with sharks (Aziz 387).
  14. One of the reasons they do this is because they have friends who motivate to be like that because they are like that (Aziz 391).
  15. They have to be able to perform the behavior in order to enjoy the adrenaline rush (Aziz 391).

Garrabrant, Christopher. “Risk-taking behavior: The Role Emotions Play.”Professional Safety, vol. 64, no. 3, Mar. 2019, pp. 46–50. Academic Search Complete.  http://web.b.ebscohost.com.libaccess.hccs.edu:2048/ehost/detail/detail?vid=6&sid=bf28e7ae-c962-4706-9549-656c863e7cab%40sessionmgr120&bdata=JnNpdGU9ZWhvc3QtbGl2ZSZzY29wZT1zaXRl#AN=135004837&db=a9h

Which research points does this source support?

  1. Helps understand the roles emotion plays in our life
  2. Helps understand the emotions that influence risk taking behaviors
  3. Helps me understand the emotional triggers on us humans

15 ideas

  1. Individuals even thinking of taking a risk behavior understand the level of consequences as a outcome of what they’re doing (Garrabrant 46).
  2. Risk can refer to a probability or a consequence (Garrabrant 46).
  3. Risk taking behaviors are influenced by human’s emotions (Garrabrant 46).
  4. Researchers came to a conclusion that emotions strongly influence the choices you take (Garrabrant 47).
  5. Under certain circumstances emotions disrupts reasoning plenty of evidence (Garrabrant 47).
  6. Triggers to our emotions bias our decisions and choices as feelings in our bodies (Garrabrant 48).
  7. Damasio argues that emotional process act upon how we behave with certain stimuli (Garrabrant 48).
  8. Empathy is the capacity to understand our own feelings and be able to share them with others (Garrabrant 49).
  9. Empathy provides a level of self-reflection to help us keep our own emotions in check (Garrabrant 49).
  10. Positive emotions are or can be associated with one state that develops them or the capacity of unhealthy foods (Garrabrant 49).
  11. It’s important to know our understanding of how the lack of positive emotions may lead us to doing risky things (Garrabrant 49).
  12. Emotional intelligence is being able to work with the competing interests of your own needs (Garrabrant 50).
  13. One way to prevent risky taking behavior is by removing competing interests (Garrabrant 51).
  14. The reason why individuals place themselves in harm is sometimes not beneficial to others but to them (Garrabrant 50).
  15. Workers working around risky areas that cause them to do risky behaviors are motivated to adapt to that environment (Garrabrant 50).

Hussain, Muhammad Sajjad. “The Impact of Owners Behaviour Towards Risk Taking by Pakistani Banks: Mediating Role of Profitability.” Journal of Academic Research in Economics, vol. 10, no. 3, Dec. 2018, pp. 455–465. Academic Search Complete.  http://web.b.ebscohost.com.libaccess.hccs.edu:2048/ehost/detail/detail?vid=7&sid=bf28e7ae-c962-4706-9549-656c863e7cab%40sessionmgr120&bdata=JnNpdGU9ZWhvc3QtbGl2ZSZzY29wZT1zaXRl#AN=134240979&db=a9h

Which research points does this source support?

  1. The benefits to some people on risk taking behaviors
  2. How others adapt and work around the risk taking behavior
  3. The profit these workers make in their risk taking jobs

15 Ideas

  1. One of the factors that exists in the financial environment that boost risks in the institutions are high risk taking behaviors (Hussain 456).
  2. The challenges of risk management include self-harm (Hussain 457).
  3. The define risk as probability of variation with unexpected results (Hussain 457).
  4. According to previous studies there is a negative relationship between private ownership and risk taking activities of the banks (Hussain 457).
  5. Risk taking activities are varied in different types of ownership structures of financial institutions (Hussain 458).
  6. Risk taking in financial institutions is also influenced by foreign ownerships (Hussain 458).
  7. Profitability has a characteristic of changing the owner’s behavior about doing risk taking behaviors (Hussain 460).
  8. Strong and experienced ownership structure is a must to manage the risk taking activities for financial institutions (Hussain 460).
  9. Risk taking decisions depend upon the owner’s behavior regarding the risk for the financial institutions (Hussain 460).
  10. Risk and financial institutions have a strong connection because risk is known for being exposed to danger (Hussain 456).
  11. Institutional ownership has a negative effect on risk taking (Hussain 459).
  12. The combination of strong governance and high expertise decreases risk even the behavior (Hussain460).
  13. Private ownership structure not suitable enough to manage risk taking activities of these banks (Hussain 461).
  14. Strong and experienced ownership is needed for managing risky environments causing risky behaviors (Hussain 462).
  15. The focus of risk management team and regulatory authorities only on increasing level of the actions that are taken (Hussain 463).

Otto, A.Ross, and Johannes C. Eichstaedt. “Real-World Unexpected Outcomes Predict City-Level Mood States and Risk-Taking Behavior.” PLoS ONE, vol. 13, no. 11, Nov. 2018, pp. 1–18. Academic Search Complete. http://web.b.ebscohost.com.libaccess.hccs.edu:2048/ehost/detail/detail?vid=8&sid=bf28e7ae-c962-4706-9549-656c863e7cab%40sessionmgr120&bdata=JnNpdGU9ZWhvc3QtbGl2ZSZzY29wZT1zaXRl#AN=133243715&db=a9h

Which research points does this source support?

  1. Unexpected outcomes from risk taking behaviors
  2. Ways to prevent self-harm towards the attitude
  3. Ways to make better choices avoiding those harmful behaviors

15 Ideas

  1. Fluctuations are driven upon unpredictable outcomes in our daily lifes but also bring risk taking behaviors (Otto 1).
  2. A body of work reveals how the impact of affectively balanced outcomes on a individuals mood is nuanced (Otto 2).
  3. Negative outcomes come out stronger when they aren’t expected (Otto 2).
  4. Risk taking behaviors are observable day by day and can sometimes be prevented (Otto 2).
  5. Generating prediction errors over time is a challenge in predicting moods (Otto 3).
  6. There are large behavioral consequences of these presumed mood state fluctuations (Otto 3).
  7. A second challenge in predicting city-level mood states is point out affectively valence real-world events that generate prediction errors over time (Otto 3).
  8. If shifts in mood state cause risk taking behaviors then population are explained by local outcomes (Otto 3).
  9. Risk taking is not knowing what the outcome could be but you don’t care if it’s good or bad (Otto 5).
  10. The concept of risk is a concern for human beings (Otto 5).
  11. Insuring oneself against possible lost is what your putting yourself against (Otto 5).
  12. Different situations give risk taking a whole different definition and understanding (Otto 4).
  13. Different personal values of researchers seem to influence the definition of risk taking they employ (Otto 4).
  14. Risk taking behaviors harm human being and they know it (Otto 4).
  15. Preventions are known but not taken (Otto 5).

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