Crutzen Rik, Giabbanelli Philippe J, Jander Astrid, Mercken Liesbeth, de Vries Hein
Department of Health Promotion, CAPHRI School for Public Health and Primary Care, Maastricht University, P.O. Box 616, 6200 MD, Maastricht, The Netherlands.
UKCRC Centre for Diet and Activity Research, MRC Epidemiology Unit, University of Cambridge School of Clinical Medicine, Institute of Metabolic Science, CB2 0QQ, Cambridge, UK.
BMC Public Health. 2015 Aug 5;15:747. doi: 10.1186/s12889-015-2092-8.
Most Dutch adolescents aged 16 to 18 engage in binge drinking. Previous studies have investigated how parenting dimensions and alcohol-specific parenting practices are related to adolescent alcohol consumption. Mixed results have been obtained on both dimensions and practices, highlighting the complexity of untangling alcohol-related factors. The aim of this study was to investigate (1) whether parents' reports of parenting dimensions and alcohol-specific parenting practices, adolescents' perceptions of these dimensions and practices, or a combination are most informative to identify binge drinkers, and (2) which of these parenting dimensions and alcohol-specific parenting practices are most informative to identify binge drinkers.
Survey data of 499 adolescent-parent dyads were collected. The computational technique of data mining was used to allow for a data driven exploration of nonlinear relationships. Specifically, a binary classification task, using an alternating decision tree, was conducted and measures regarding the performance of the classifiers are reported after a 10-fold cross-validation.
Depending on the parenting dimension or practice, parents' reports correctly identified the drinking behaviour of 55.8% (using psychological control) up to 70.2% (using rules) of adolescents. Adolescents' perceptions were best at identifying binge drinkers whereas parents' perceptions were best at identifying non-binge drinkers.
Of the parenting dimensions and practices, rules are particularly informative in understanding drinking behaviour. Adolescents' perceptions and parents' reports are complementary as they can help identifying binge drinkers and non-binge drinkers respectively, indicating that surveying specific aspects of adolescent-parent dynamics can improve our understanding of complex addictive behaviours.
大多数16至18岁的荷兰青少年存在酗酒行为。以往研究探讨了养育维度及特定酒精养育方式与青少年饮酒行为之间的关系。在这两个维度及养育方式方面均得到了混合的结果,凸显了梳理与酒精相关因素的复杂性。本研究的目的是调查:(1)父母对养育维度及特定酒精养育方式的报告、青少年对这些维度及方式的认知,或两者结合,哪一种对于识别酗酒者最具信息价值;(2)这些养育维度及特定酒精养育方式中,哪一种对于识别酗酒者最具信息价值。
收集了499对青少年-父母二元组的调查数据。采用数据挖掘计算技术对非线性关系进行数据驱动探索。具体而言,使用交替决策树进行二元分类任务,并在10倍交叉验证后报告关于分类器性能的测量结果。
根据养育维度或方式的不同,父母的报告能够正确识别55.8%(使用心理控制)至70.2%(使用规则)的青少年饮酒行为。青少年的认知在识别酗酒者方面表现最佳,而父母的认知在识别非酗酒者方面表现最佳。
在养育维度和方式中,规则在理解饮酒行为方面特别具有信息价值。青少年的认知和父母的报告具有互补性,因为它们分别有助于识别酗酒者和非酗酒者,这表明调查青少年-父母动态关系的特定方面可以增进我们对复杂成瘾行为的理解。