Wallace Lacey N
Department of Criminal Justice, Penn State Altoona, Altoona, PA, USA.
Youth Violence Juv Justice. 2017 Jul;15(3):264-280. doi: 10.1177/1541204016639354. Epub 2016 Mar 18.
Many past studies have observed evidence of sibling similarity and influence for delinquency and substance use. However, studies of sibling similarity for adolescent weapon carrying, particularly for weapons beyond firearms, are largely absent from the literature. The present study assesses sibling similarity in weapon carrying as well as the relative contributions of genetics, shared environment, and nonshared environment. Data are obtained from the first two waves of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health and analyzed using biometrical genetic models for twins and actor-partner interdependence models for nontwins. Results indicate little, if any, contribution stemming from genetics. There is also no evidence of a significant shared environment effect. Instead, all or nearly all of the variation and similarity in weapon carrying among siblings are related to the nonshared environment, particularly gang affiliation. Implications and possible extensions of these findings are discussed.
过去许多研究都观察到了兄弟姐妹在犯罪和物质使用方面的相似性及相互影响的证据。然而,关于青少年携带武器的兄弟姐妹相似性研究,尤其是针对枪支以外武器的研究,在文献中基本缺失。本研究评估了兄弟姐妹在携带武器方面的相似性,以及基因、共同环境和非共同环境的相对影响。数据取自全国青少年健康纵向研究的前两波,并使用双胞胎的生物统计学遗传模型和非双胞胎的行为者-伙伴相互依赖模型进行分析。结果表明,基因因素即便有影响,作用也微乎其微。也没有证据表明存在显著的共同环境效应。相反,兄弟姐妹之间携带武器的所有或几乎所有差异和相似性都与非共同环境有关,尤其是帮派关系。本文讨论了这些发现的意义和可能的拓展。