Skip to main navigation
Skip to search
Skip to main content
Aston Research Explorer Home
Help & FAQ
Home
Research units
Profiles
Research output
Datasets
Student theses
Activities
Press/Media
Prizes
Equipment
Search by expertise, name or affiliation
Economic and social deprivation predicts impulsive choice in young children.
Richard Tunney
School of Psychology
Aston Research Centre for Health in Ageing
College of Health and Life Sciences
Applied Health Research Group
Research output
:
Preprint or Working paper
›
Preprint
Overview
Fingerprint
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'Economic and social deprivation predicts impulsive choice in young children.'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
Sort by
Weight
Alphabetically
Keyphrases
Addiction
20%
Alcohol
20%
Decision Model
20%
Delay Discounting
20%
Deprived Areas
40%
Economic Availability
20%
Economic Circumstances
20%
Economic Deprivation
100%
Environmental Components
20%
Health Anxiety
40%
Health Inequalities
20%
Impulsive Choice
100%
Impulsivity
100%
Obesity
20%
Public Health
20%
Resource Availability
20%
Risk Factors
20%
Social Deprivation
100%
Tobacco
20%
Uniformly Distributed
20%
Young children
100%
Neuroscience
Decision-Making
40%
Impulsivity
100%
Individual Differences
20%