Citation
Flaherty, B. P. (2008). Testing the degree of cross-sectional and longitudinal dependence between two discrete dynamic processes.
Developmental Psychology. vol. 44 (2) pp. 468-80 , PMCID: PMC3880677
Abstract
Developmental research often involves studying change across 2 or more processes or constructs simultaneously. A natural question in this work is whether change in these 2 processes is related or independent. Associative latent transition analysis (ALTA) was designed to test hypotheses about the degree to which change in 2 discrete latent variables is related. The ALTA model is a type of latent class model, which is a categorical latent variable model based on categorical indicators. In the ALTA approach, level and change on 1 variable is predicted by level and change in another. Two types of hypotheses are discussed: (a) broad hypotheses of dependence between the 2 discrete latent variables and (b) targeted hypotheses comparing specific patterns of change between levels of the discrete variables. Both types of hypotheses are tested via nested model comparisons. Analyses of relations between psychological state and substance use illustrate the model. Recent psychological state and recent substance use were found to be associated cross-sectionally and longitudinally, implying that change in recent substance use was related to change in recent psychological state.
URL
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18331137/Keyword(s)
Adolescent
Notes
Flaherty, Brian P
Reference Type
Journal Article
Journal Title
Developmental Psychology
Author(s)
Flaherty, B. P.
Year Published
2008
Volume Number
44
Issue Number
2
Pages
468-80
Edition
2008/03/12
DOI
10.1037/0012-1649.44.2.468
PMCID
PMC3880677
NIHMSID
Nihms329627
Reference ID
4826