Many young adolescents are
embedded in neighborhoods, schools, and homes where alcohol and drugs are
frequently used. However, little is known about (a) how witnessing others'
substance use affects adolescents in their daily lives and (b) which
adolescents will be most affected.
The current study used ecological momentary
assessment with 151 young adolescents (ages 11-15) to examine the daily
association between witnessing substance use and antisocial behavior across 38
consecutive days.
Results from multilevel logistic regression models indicated
that adolescents were more likely to engage in antisocial behavior on days when
they witnessed others using substances, an association that held when substance
use was witnessed inside the home as well as outside the home (e.g., at school
or in their neighborhoods). A significant Gene × Environment interaction
suggested that the same-day association between witnessing substance use and
antisocial behavior was significantly stronger among adolescents with, versus
without, the dopamine receptor D4 seven repeat (DRD4-7R) allele.
The
implications of the findings for theory and research related to adolescent
antisocial behavior are discussed.
Purchase full article at: http://goo.gl/DyrNhy
By: Russell MA1, Wang L2, Odgers CL2.
- 1Pennsylvania State University.
- 2Duke University. More at: https://twitter.com/hiv_insight
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