Understanding US adolescents’ and emerging adults’ overestimation of their cannabis use quantity

•Adolescents and emerging adults overestimated the cannabis quantity used in an average joint.•Those who initiated cannabis at an older age were less likely to overestimate their use.•Individuals with more cannabis use problems were less likely to overestimate their use. Cannabis is the most used fe...

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Veröffentlicht in:Addictive behaviors 2025-02, Vol.161, p.108206, Article 108206
Hauptverfasser: Leone, Ruschelle M., Tomko, Rachel L., Hindocha, Chandni, Hardeman, Loren, Tuttle, Jade, Gray, Kevin M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Adolescents and emerging adults overestimated the cannabis quantity used in an average joint.•Those who initiated cannabis at an older age were less likely to overestimate their use.•Individuals with more cannabis use problems were less likely to overestimate their use. Cannabis is the most used federally illicit drug in the United States (U.S). Understanding how accurate adolescents and emerging adults are at estimating their cannabis use quantity is important, as this lays the groundwork for understanding and studying the outcomes associated with cannabis use. This study aimed to assess the accuracy of cannabis quantity in grams for a typical joint and identify predictors of accuracy among U.S. adolescents and emerging adults. Participants (n = 50; aged 14–21) who reported using joints in the past 30 days completed measures of cannabis use characteristics and problems, were asked to “eyeball” the amount of cannabis in their average joint using a cannabis substitute and estimated the number of grams. The cannabis substitute was then weighed in grams. Paired samples t-tests indicated that participants estimated significantly more grams in a joint (M=.82; SD = 0.46) than the actual amount of the surrogate substance (M=.47; SD = 0.21; t(49) = 6.32, p 
ISSN:0306-4603
1873-6327
1873-6327
DOI:10.1016/j.addbeh.2024.108206