Literature DB >> 15257788

Context and cognitions: environmental risk, social influence, and adolescent substance use.

Frederick X Gibbons1, Meg Gerrard, Linda S Vande Lune, Thomas Ashby Wills, Gene Brody, Rand D Conger.   

Abstract

This study examined the cognitions thought to mediate the impact of context on adolescent substance use and also the extent to which context moderates the relations between these cognitions and use. Risk cognitions and behaviors were assessed in a panel of 746 African American adolescents (M age 10.5 at Wave 1, 12.2 at Wave 2). Results indicated that adolescents living in high-risk neighborhoods were more inclined toward substance use and more likely to be using at Wave 2. These context effects were mediated by the adolescents' risk cognitions: their risk images, willingness to use, and intentions to use. Also, context moderated the relation between willingness and use (the relation was stronger in high-risk neighborhoods) but it did not moderate the intentions to use relation.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15257788     DOI: 10.1177/0146167204264788

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pers Soc Psychol Bull        ISSN: 0146-1672


  50 in total

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8.  Elucidating Parenting Processes That Influence Adolescent Alcohol Use: A Qualitative Inquiry.

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9.  Early adolescent, multi-ethnic, urban youth's exposure to patterns of alcohol-related neighborhood characteristics.

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