Peer and Adolescent Substance Use Among 6th-9th Graders: Latent Growth Analyses of Influence Versus Selection Mechanisms

This study analyzed peer-influence versus peer-selection mechanisms in adolescent tobacco, alcohol, and marijuana use. Participants were surveyed 3 times, with 1-year intervals, about peers' substance use and their own use; Sample 1 had 1,190 participants (initial mean age = 12.4 years), Sample...

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Veröffentlicht in:Health psychology 1999-09, Vol.18 (5), p.453-463
Hauptverfasser: Wills, Thomas Ashby, Cleary, Sean D
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This study analyzed peer-influence versus peer-selection mechanisms in adolescent tobacco, alcohol, and marijuana use. Participants were surveyed 3 times, with 1-year intervals, about peers' substance use and their own use; Sample 1 had 1,190 participants (initial mean age = 12.4 years), Sample 2 had 1,277 participants (initial mean age = 11.5 years). Latent growth analyses that were based on composite scores indicated that initial peer use was positively related to rate of change in adolescent use, supporting the influence mechanism; there was little evidence for a selection mechanism. Difficult temperament, poor self-control, and deviance-prone attitudes were related to initial levels for both peer and adolescent use. It is concluded that peer influence is the primary mechanism during middle adolescence. Temperament-related attributes may be predisposing to early experimentation and deviant-peer affiliations.
ISSN:0278-6133
1930-7810
DOI:10.1037/0278-6133.18.5.453