Impulsivity is the tendency to act on the first impulse, under the influence of momentary stimuli, emotions, drives, without thinking about one’s actions or weighing alternative courses of action (especially those involving delayed reward).
It is difficult to contain both positive and negative emotions.
Periodic bouts of talkativeness: a person speaks without closing his mouth, not paying attention to the reaction of the interlocutor.
The tendency to answer without listening to the question and to act without thinking for a second.
Another name for aggressive, epileptoid, excitable, explosive personality disorder.
Doctors sometimes treat it as two separate disorders—impulsive disorder and borderline personality disorder.
This is dangerous both for the child himself and for others.
Weak ability to analyze lived experience. Impulsive people often do not draw conclusions from situations that have occurred, cannot restore cause-and-effect relationships, and do not realize that some events could have happened through their own fault.
Curiosity, impulsiveness and a tendency to engage in risky behavior are also largely dependent on the production of dopamine.
When this hormone is deficient, a person may experience lack of motivation, boredom, low mood, anxiety or depression.
Dopamine makes the little pleasures in life more vivid.