Publications

Magazines and books background

Publications

The Add Health bibliography includes more than 8,000 journal articles, presentations, manuscripts, books, book chapters and dissertations using Add Health data sets. To obtain a copy of any item, please check the citation to see if a URL link to the article is available, or contact the author.

Is one of your publications missing from our database? Please email addhealth_publications@unc.edu with the full citation, and we’ll add it to the database.

Displaying 10 of 9889 matching citations.

Li, S. (2005). What are Jane's secret weapons: Decomposing the gender gap of US college attendance. 9th Women's Congress. Seoul, Korea: 9th Women's Congress.

Lin, X. (2005). Peer effects and student academic achievement: An application of spatial autoregressive model with group unobservables. Canadian Economics Assocation. Hamilton, Canada: Canadian Economics Assocation.

Lin, X. (2005). Peer effects and student academic achievement: An appliction of spatial autoregressive model with group unobservables. Midwest Econometric Group. Carbondale, IL: Midwest Econometric Group.

Linde, S. & Randall, B. A. (2005). Patterns of change and longitudinal influences on religiosity from adolescence to young adulthood: Results from a national sample. Society for Research in Child Development. Atlanta, GA: Society for Research in Child Development.

Lohéac, Y. (2005). To lead or to follow? Popularity and adolescents behaviors. Journées de Microéconomic Appliquée. Hammamet, Tunisia: Journées de Microéconomic Appliquée.

Mack, K. Y. & Leiber, M. J. (2005). Race, gender, single-mother households, and delinquency: A further test of power-control theory. Youth and Society. vol. 37 (2) pp. 115-144

Majumdar, D. (2005). Explaining adolescent sexual risks by race and ethnicity: Importance of individual, familial, and extra-familial factors. International Journal of Sociology of the Family. vol. 31 (1) pp. 19-37

Majumdar, D.; Anderson, A.; & McQueen, C. (2005). The moderating effect of friends' substance use on the relationship between risky sexual behavior and sexual self-efficacy among African-American adolescents. Southwestern Social Science Association. New Orleans, LA: Southwestern Social Science Association.

Maldonado-Molina, M. (2005). The Gateway Hypothesis of Substance Use: An Operational Definition, Alternative Progression Patterns, and Methodological Challenges.

Maldonado-Molina, M. M.; Collins, L. M.; Ramirez, R. R.; & Canino, G. (2005). Using latent transition analysis to examine the gateway hypothesis of substance use onset. College on Problems of Drug Dependence (CPDD). Orlando, FL: College on Problems of Drug Dependence (CPDD).