| [article] 
					| Titre : | The Origins of the Correlations between Tobacco, Alcohol, and Cannabis Use During Adolescence |  
					| Type de document : | texte imprimé |  
					| Auteurs : | Michael T. LYNSKEY, Auteur ; David M. FERGUSSON, Auteur ; John L. HORWOOD, Auteur |  
					| Année de publication : | 1998 |  
					| Article en page(s) : | p.995-1005 |  
					| Langues : | Anglais (eng) |  
					| Mots-clés : | Substance use  adolescence  structural equation modelling  longitudinal study |  
					| Index. décimale : | PER Périodiques |  
					| Résumé : | Methods of structural equation modelling were used to analyse the correlations between reports of tobacco, alcohol, and cannabis use in a birth cohort of New Zealand children studied to the age of 16. This analysis produced three major conclusions: (a) the correlations between tobacco, alcohol, and cannabis use could be explained by a factor representing the individual's vulnerability to substance use; (b) predictors of vulnerability to substance use were the extent to which the individual affiliated with delinquent or substance using peers, novelty seeking, and parental illicit drug use; (c) in the region of 54% of the correlations between substance use behaviours could be predicted from observed risk factors and 46% was attributable to non-observed sources of vulnerability. |  
					| Permalink : | https://www.cra-rhone-alpes.org/cid/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=123 |  in Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry > 39-7  (October 1998) . - p.995-1005
 [article] The Origins of the Correlations between Tobacco, Alcohol, and Cannabis Use During Adolescence [texte imprimé] / Michael T. LYNSKEY , Auteur ; David M. FERGUSSON , Auteur ; John L. HORWOOD , Auteur . - 1998 . - p.995-1005.Langues  : Anglais (eng )in Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry  > 39-7  (October 1998)  . - p.995-1005 
					| Mots-clés : | Substance use  adolescence  structural equation modelling  longitudinal study |  
					| Index. décimale : | PER Périodiques |  
					| Résumé : | Methods of structural equation modelling were used to analyse the correlations between reports of tobacco, alcohol, and cannabis use in a birth cohort of New Zealand children studied to the age of 16. This analysis produced three major conclusions: (a) the correlations between tobacco, alcohol, and cannabis use could be explained by a factor representing the individual's vulnerability to substance use; (b) predictors of vulnerability to substance use were the extent to which the individual affiliated with delinquent or substance using peers, novelty seeking, and parental illicit drug use; (c) in the region of 54% of the correlations between substance use behaviours could be predicted from observed risk factors and 46% was attributable to non-observed sources of vulnerability. |  
					| Permalink : | https://www.cra-rhone-alpes.org/cid/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=123 | 
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