Alcohol use in adolescent twins and affiliation with substance using peers

Citation

Hill, J.; Emery, R.; E; Harden, K.; P; Mendle, J.; & Turkheimer, E. (2008). Alcohol use in adolescent twins and affiliation with substance using peers. Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology. vol. 36 (1) pp. 81-94

Abstract

Affiliation with substance using peers is one of the strongest predictors of adolescent alcohol use. This association is typically interpreted causally: peers who drink incite their friends to drink. This association may be complicated by uncontrolled genetic and environmental confounds because teens with familial predispositions for adolescent substance use may be more likely to select into social networks where drinking is common. We test this alternative hypothesis using a sample of 1,820 twin and sibling pairs, and their same-sex best friends, from three waves of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health. Across all three waves, peer report of substance use did not influence adolescent alcohol use when genetic and shared environmental predispositions for drinking were considered. The association between alcohol use and peer behavior may be a spurious association attributable to a shared genetic liability to drink alcohol and associate with peers who drink alcohol.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1007%2Fs10802-007-9161-0

Keyword(s)

Alcohol

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology

Author(s)

Hill, J.
Emery, R.
E
Harden, K.
P
Mendle, J.
Turkheimer, E.

Year Published

2008

Volume Number

36

Issue Number

1

Pages

81-94

DOI

10.1007/s10802-007-9161-0

Reference ID

8722