Abstract:
Risk behaviour of young adults have progressively escalated over the past few
decades. It generally emerges during adolescence, resulting from a sense of
invulnerability, combined with boldness. Therefore, young adults for whom risk
taking is a preoccupation of daily life, provide a normative sample for assessing risk
behavior. Human risk behaviour has been analyzed mainly based on Western context
while studies in the developing country setting is limited. The literature review
suggests the need of a tool to evaluate the risk behaviour of young adults in a
developing country setting and also the need to establish the relationship between
individual characteristics, external stimuli and risk behaviour. The study aims to
elicit factors that determine risk behaviour of young adults in Sri Lanka and how
these factors can be used to develop risk profiles through a comprehensive model.
The behavioural model of the determinants of risk behaviour suggests that this is
determined by two individual factors, namely risk propensity and risk perception.
Risk propensity was found to be positively related and risk perception was negatively
related to risk-taking behaviour. It was further postulated that risk perception
partially mediates the effect of propensity to take risk. The model was later extended
to analyse the effect of risk on decision-making behaviour in organizational settings
where the reconceptualised model describes the joint effect of both dispositional and
situational factors on decision making along with organizational and problem
characteristics. The reconceptualised model of risk behaviour has been used to form
the basis of the model and it has been modified according to the Sri Lankan context
by including the individual characteristics and excluding the specific organisational
related elements. The
individual characteristics
influence risk preference
while both risk preference
and inertia will affect the
risk propensity of an
individual. The way the
problem is framed is
influenced by attitudes,
beliefs, knowledge and
experience. Furthermore,
the value systems, norms
and cultural ideologies form
the social influence which
affects the risk perception
and finally together with
risk propensity affects risk
behaviour. The proposed model has been developed through review of literature, and
interviews with a number of young adults with a dispersed set of individual
characteristics and will be validated in the next phase.