Sensation seeking is deļ¬ned as the seeking of varied, novel, complex, and intense sensations and experiences. It involves the willingness to take not just physical, but even social, legal, and ļ¬nancial risks for the sake of such experiences. People who consistently indulge into such acts are referred to as having the personality trait of sensation seeking.
Marvin
Zuckerman, the person who developed the concept of the trait of sensation
seeking, suggests four components of sensation seeking - thrill and adventure seeking (seeking
exciting sensations through participating in risky activities); experience seeking (seeking excitement through the mind by leading a
nonconforming lifestyle); disinhibition (seeking sensation through social
stimulation and disinhibitory behaviors such as drinking); and boredom susceptibility (avoiding monotonous and boring situations and activities).
Sensation
seeking has been found to be associated with varied levels of a wide range of
activities such as drug use, excessive sexual behavior, and participating in
risky sports. Research has also found it to be associated with delinquency and
anti-social behavior.
Research
shows that sensation seeking has a biological basis. Sensation seekers have low
brain arousal and a very high threshold for social stimulation. This makes them
seek arousal from the environment. They seem to have a strong, nervous system-based,
orienting response; they are biologically primed to seek out and engage their
environments.
Further,
negative correlations of sensation seeking have been found with neurochemicals such
as monoamine oxidase (associated with schizophrenia, depression, ADHD,
substance abuse) and dopamine-beta-hydroxylase (associated with decision
making, substance abuse, schizophrenia, ADHD) – both play a significant role in
production of specific neurotransmitters (brain chemicals due to which neurons
communicate). Additionally, high sensation seeking is associated with low
levels of norepinephrine (neurotransmitter responsible for attentiveness and
emotions). Such people seek stimulation in order to compensate for their lower
than optimal levels of norepinephrine.
Sensation
seeking also involves impulsivity or the trait impulsiveness, which is
characterized by activities that have no thought, reflection, or consideration
for consequences. These impulsive acts are considered to be unduly risky, which
is suggestive of sensation seeking.
Impulsivity
is a component of substance abuse and anti-social behavior, which are
correlates of sensation seeking behavior. Impulsivity is majorly due to the
imbalance of serotonin (neurotransmitter responsible for mood balance). To
compensate for this imbalance (generally low levels), individuals become
impulsive.
Sensation
seeking has been found to correlate with Eysenck’s biological trait theory,
specifically with the dimensions of extraversion and psychoticism. Extraverts
(extroverts) are people who are active, sociable, outgoing, and like to be
around people. According to Eysenck, extraverts have a low level of brain
arousal, which makes them have a high threshold for stimulation.
It
is this due to this that they seek highly stimulating environments. This is
true for sensation seekers also, but they do not have a consistent preference to
be around others. Therefore, sensation seeking individuals are not simply
extraverts.
The
psychoticism dimension of Eysenck’s theory involves varied intensities of
criminal and psychopathic behavior. At the extreme end of the continuum,
psychoticism involves schizophrenic and other psychotic states in which in which
contact with reality is lost and there is severely disordered cognition,
affect, and behavior. Psychoticism also involves low levels of monoamine
oxidase, dopamine-beta-hydroxylase, and norepinephrine, which is found in
sensation seeking as well.
Apart
from the biological causes, Heinz Kohut, the founder of Self Psychology (school
of psychoanalysis that explains psychopathology as a result of disrupted or
unmet developmental needs), related sensation seeking to an unhealthy
development of the self (Self is the behavioral, affective, and cognitive representation
of an individual). Kohut suggests that the presence of loving and empathic
relationships is the key in healthy development.
During
the initial years of a child, the mother and later on, other care-takers and
significant relationships, need to admire and affirm the child’s strengths,
health, and specialness. When this happens, the individual develops an ideal personality
type, that is, a person who has an autonomous self. Such people, according to
Kohut, are characterized by healthy levels of self-esteem and by mutually fulfilling
interpersonal relationships.
If
this does not happen, then Kohut suggests that the individual develops a non-cohesive,
empty, or injured self. One of the consequences is that the person possesses an
understimulated self – a numb and empty person who may engage in sensation
seeking and substance abuse. Perhaps to compensate for the numbness and
emptiness, the individual gets involved into sensation seeking.
Sensation
seeking is associated with a wide range of behaviors such as substance abuse, anti-social behavior, excessive sexual behavior, participation in risky sports, and other similar dangerous
activities. To compensate their low brain arousal or emptiness, it becomes a necessity for such individuals to indulge into sensation seeking behavior, even
though such acts may turn out to be life threatening.
2 comments:
Sensation seekers destroy relationships because they put the next thrill above work, their partner and everything else n life that they should place value on.
I am an extreme HSP and I am currently (on and off, for the last seven years) in a relationship with an emotionally damaged thrill seeker who is, although not an angry person, can be very abrupt, abrasive, and judgmental, and likes to have everything very much her way. Stubborn doesn't begin to cover it. The worst part though, is that she is so anxiety ridden that she seldom ever listens to what I have to say. I may be trying to say goodbye to her with love and affection, as I am about to leave her home after the weekend has ended, and she is routinely obsessing about all she needs to do in the days, weeks, months, and even YEARS ahead. Much of the time I feel as though she doesn't even know I'm on the room, much less does she actually listen to me. If I tell her how I feel about something, and she is actually listening, I can count on her to tell me how I should (or shouldn't) feel. The only reason I am still in this relationship is that I don't want to hurt her, but it makes me unhappy much more than it makes me happy, and the resentment just continues to build. Oh, lucky me.....
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