Sensation seeking

Sensation seeking is a personality trait, identified by psychologist Marvin Zuckerman, describing how strongly a person craves varied, novel, complex, and intense experiences — and how willing they are to take physical, social, or financial risks to have them. The Sensation Seeking Scale maps it across four facets: thrill & adventure seeking, experience seeking, disinhibition, and boredom susceptibility. With roots in biology and brain chemistry, it helps explain why some people chase the new and intense while others find contentment in the calm and familiar.

Sensation seeking is a well-established trait in personality psychology, introduced by Marvin Zuckerman (1971) and measured by the Sensation Seeking Scale, Form V (Zuckerman, Eysenck & Eysenck, 1978), with a widely used brief version (BSSS) developed by Hoyle and colleagues (2002). Decades of research connect it to biological and genetic markers. A reflective self-ID, not a diagnosis. (Sensation Seeking Scale (Zuckerman))

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