Northern Kentucky University, United States.
University of California, San Diego, United States.
Addict Behav. 2021 Oct;121:106985. doi: 10.1016/j.addbeh.2021.106985. Epub 2021 May 16.
Many psychosocial factors have been implicated in the onset and escalation of substance use in adolescence and young adulthood. Typically, each factor explains a small amount of the variance in substance use outcomes, and effects are typically applied across a broad range of ages or computed from cross-sectional data. The current study evaluated the association of factors including social influence (e.g., peer substance use), cognitive features (e.g., alcohol expectancies), and personality and emotional characteristics (e.g., impulsivity and typical responses to stress) in substance use throughout adolescence and emerging adulthood (ages 13-25; N = 798). Mixed-effects models tailored for the accelerated longitudinal design employed in this study were constructed with psychosocial and developmental factors predicting alcohol and cannabis use. As most participants in the sample exhibited little or no substance use at baseline by design, we excluded baseline assessments and examined data from follow-up years 1, 2, 3, and 4. Interactions between age cohort, change in age, and psychosocial predictors of substance use revealed differing associations over the developmental window for alcohol and cannabis use. For example, positive alcohol expectancies and sensation seeking were most strongly associated with greater drinking after age 18, whereas sensation seeking was associated with increased cannabis use as early as age 15. Higher emotion regulation skills led to less cannabis use in younger ages (i.e., shallower slopes below age 17), but this protective effect diminished after age 17. Results highlight developmentally important factors that differentially contribute to substance use in adolescence and young adulthood. We also demonstrate the importance of developmentally sensitive analyses that maximize the value of data from accelerated longitudinal designs.
许多社会心理因素与青少年和青年时期物质使用的开始和升级有关。通常,每个因素都解释了物质使用结果中很小一部分的差异,并且效果通常适用于广泛的年龄范围或从横断面数据中计算得出。本研究评估了包括社会影响(例如,同伴物质使用)、认知特征(例如,酒精期望)以及人格和情绪特征(例如,冲动和对压力的典型反应)在内的因素与整个青春期和成年早期(年龄 13-25 岁;N=798)物质使用之间的关联。为这项研究中使用的加速纵向设计量身定制的混合效应模型,利用社会心理和发展因素预测酒精和大麻的使用。由于样本中的大多数参与者在设计上几乎没有或没有物质使用的基线,我们排除了基线评估,并检查了随访第 1、2、3 和 4 年的数据。年龄队列、年龄变化和物质使用的社会心理预测因素之间的相互作用揭示了在酒精和大麻使用的发展窗口中不同的关联。例如,积极的酒精期望和寻求刺激与 18 岁以后饮酒量的增加最为密切相关,而寻求刺激与 15 岁时大麻使用的增加有关。较高的情绪调节技能导致年轻时(即 17 岁以下)较少使用大麻,但这种保护作用在 17 岁以后减弱。研究结果突出了在青少年和青年时期对物质使用有不同贡献的发展重要因素。我们还展示了发展敏感分析的重要性,这些分析可以最大限度地利用加速纵向设计的数据价值。