Developmental Considerations for Assessment and Treatment of Impulsivity in Older Adults

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Abstract

Impulsivity is an important factor in many clinical disorders, especially alcohol and substance use disorders. Most of the research on impulsivity in this domain has focused on adolescence and young adulthood, as this developmental period is characterized by onset of and escalation in alcohol and substance use, likely driven in part by brain development patterns. Although many individuals eventually “mature out” of these behaviors in middle adulthood, a critical subset of people do not. The role of impulsivity in middle-to-older adulthood, when certain individuals transition from normative to disordered substance use, has not been carefully examined. The goal of this paper is to review the literature on measuring and modifying impulsivity from adolescence through older adulthood, with a special focus on middle-to-older adulthood. We propose that impulsivity research should include data on middle-to-older adulthood as an important time of transition to disordered use. We consider how impulsivity might have unique meaning at different stages of the adult lifespan and suggest modifications for assessing and treating impulsivity in older adults.

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Liu, M., Argyriou, E., & Cyders, M. A. (2020). Developmental Considerations for Assessment and Treatment of Impulsivity in Older Adults. In Current Topics in Behavioral Neurosciences (Vol. 47, pp. 165–177). Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH. https://doi.org/10.1007/7854_2019_124

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