Cleveland H Harrington, Wiebe Richard P, Rowe David C
Department of Human Development and Family Studies, Texas Tech University, USA.
J Genet Psychol. 2005 Jun;166(2):153-69.
Substance-using friends expose adolescents to models of, and opportunities for, substance use that may lead to its initiation or reinforce existing use. Using genetically informative data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (P. S. Bearman, J. Jones, & J. R. Udry, 1998), the authors examined whether adolescents' exposure to friends' tobacco smoking and alcohol drinking was better explained by family-social or genetic influences. To conduct analyses, the authors constructed substance use exposure scores for adolescent siblings from the responses of siblings' nominated friends to self-reported smoking and drinking items. Using behavioral-genetic analyses of these substance use exposure scores, the authors estimated that 64% of the variance in adolescents' exposure to friends who smoke and drink could be explained by genetic influences, whereas shared environmental influences were zero. These results provide evidence of active, evocative, or both types of gene-environment correlations. Genetic factors can influence the formation of friendships with substance-using peers, thereby contributing to adolescents' exposure to substance use behaviors.
有吸毒行为的朋友会让青少年接触到吸毒的榜样和机会,这可能导致他们开始吸毒或强化现有的吸毒行为。作者利用青少年健康纵向研究(P.S.贝尔曼、J.琼斯和J.R.乌德里,1998年)中的基因信息数据,研究了青少年接触朋友吸烟和饮酒的情况是由家庭社会影响还是基因影响能更好地解释。为了进行分析,作者根据兄弟姐妹提名的朋友对自我报告的吸烟和饮酒项目的回答,为青少年兄弟姐妹构建了吸毒暴露分数。通过对这些吸毒暴露分数进行行为遗传学分析,作者估计,青少年接触吸烟和饮酒朋友的差异中,64%可由基因影响来解释,而共同环境影响为零。这些结果为主动型、诱发型或两种类型的基因-环境相关性提供了证据。遗传因素会影响与有吸毒行为的同龄人建立友谊,从而导致青少年接触吸毒行为。