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Decision-Making in Young Adults: Towards a Better Understanding of Individual Differences in Decision-Making Anxiety

The study of individual differences provides insights into how person-specific factors influence
decision-making, either before, during or after a decision is made. This dissertation examined a
specific individual difference in decision-making: decision-making anxiety. With the adoption of
a situation-specific approach, a series of three studies allowed for the conceptual definition of
this construct, the development of a measure, and the exploration of its role in the decisionmaking process. Study 1 focused on the development and validation of the Decision-Making
Anxiety Inventory. The results demonstrated that the 8-item scale is a useful measure of
decision-making anxiety, a superordinate construct, best understood by the interrelations of its
three factors of anxiety, worry, and emotionality. Moreover, this study situated decision-making
anxiety alongside existing decision-making and personality constructs. In Study 2, the
relationships between decision-making anxiety and objective and perceived decision-making
competence, and perceived decision quality were examined. This study also included crossvalidation from peers. Findings revealed that anxious decision-makers viewed themselves as
poor decision-makers who do not make quality decisions. This perception was not supported by
the results from objective measures, nor from peer ratings. In Study 3, the role of decisionmaking anxiety was explored in a specific decision-making context: job search. Data was
gathered at two time points, two months apart. This study investigated whether decision-making
anxiety led to poorer job choice outcomes, via its relationship with job search behaviours.
Results demonstrated that decision-making anxiety was a significant negative predictor of job
search effort and intensity, and the focused, exploratory, and haphazard job search strategies.
However, decision-making anxiety did not predict the more distal outcomes. Overall, this
dissertation highlights that decision-making anxiety is a relevant individual difference in decision-making, which appears to influence individuals’ perceptions about their decisionmaking skills, their experience of decision outcomes, and their decision-related behaviours

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:uottawa.ca/oai:ruor.uottawa.ca:10393/41466
Date19 November 2020
CreatorsGirard, Annie
ContributorsBonaccio, Silvia
PublisherUniversité d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
Source SetsUniversité d’Ottawa
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
Formatapplication/pdf

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