Taking risks to feel excitement: Detailed personality profile and genetic associations

Author:

Ausmees Liisi1,Talts Maie1,Allik Jüri12,Vainik Uku13,Sikka Timo T.4,Nikopensius Tiit4,Esko Tõnu4,Realo Anu15

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Psychology, University of Tartu, Estonia

2. Estonian Academy of Sciences, Estonia

3. Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University, Canada

4. Institute of Genomics, University of Tartu, Estonia

5. Department of Psychology, University of Warwick, UK

Abstract

This study mapped the personality and genetics of risky excitement-seekers focusing on skydiving behavior. We compared 298 skydivers to 298 demographically matched controls across the NEO Personality Inventory-3 domains, facets, and 240 items. The most significant item-level effects were aggregated into a poly-item score of skydiving-associated personality markers (Study 1), where higher scores describe individuals who enjoy risky situations but have no self-control issues. The skydiving-associated personality marker score was associated with greater physical activity, higher rate of traumatic injuries, and better mental health in a sample of 3558 adults (Study 2). From genetic perspective, we associated skydiving behavior with 19 candidate variants that have previously been linked to excitement-seeking (Study 1). Polymorphisms in the SERT gene were the strongest predictors of skydiving, but the false discovery rate-adjusted (FDR-adjusted) p-values were non-significant. In Study 2, we predicted the skydiving-associated personality marker score and E5: Excitement-seeking from multiple risk-taking polygenic scores, using publicly available summary data from genome-wide association studies. While E5: Excitement-seeking was most strongly predicted by general risk tolerance and risky behaviors’ polygenic scores, the skydiving-associated personality marker score was most strongly associated with the adventurousness polygenic scores. Phenotypic and polygenic scores associations suggest that skydiving is a specific—perhaps more functional—form of excitement-seeking, which may nevertheless lead to physical injuries.

Funder

Tartu Ülikool

The Estonian Ministry of Education and Science

Eesti Teadusagentuur

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Social Psychology

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