The Rutgers Health and Human Development Project (RHHDP) was first funded in 1978. Initial testing of subjects, aged 12, 15, and 18, occurred between 1979-1981. the sample (698 males, 682 females) is most representative of white adolescents living in a metropolitan, working and middle-class environment. Grants from both NIDA and NIAAA made it possible to retest subjects on these additional occasions (i.e. T2, T3, and T4). Our tracking efforts have been relatively successful in view of an overall longitudinal follow up rate of 91% over a 13-year period. The present application seeks support for the retesting at age 30 of those participants who were 25 years old at T4 and the analysis of use and use outcomes at age 28-31 for all participants in the RHHDP.
The specific aims of the proposed project are fourfold: (1) To retest all members of the 1967-1969 cohort when they are 30/31 years old. (2) To examine patterns of change/discontinuity as well as persistence/continuity in use, abuse, and antisocial behavior. in particular, were are interested in the role of potential turning points that may either bring about declines in use behavior as a consequence of altered social circumstances and opportunities or, alternatively, maintain and even accentuate use behavior as, for instance, manifested by individuals' tendency to select social contexts which are consistent with their behavior. (3) To examine differences in adult functioning as outcomes of different use histories and trajectories. In particular, we are interested in consequences in the areas of: educational attainments, illegal/criminal behavior, attainment of adult roles, health interpersonal relations, and personal satisfaction. Obviously, the empirical investigation of use outcomes must be closely linked to an examination of change and persistence in use. That is, use consequences, by their nature and/or timing, may themselves have 'turning point effects' on subsequent use levels. (4) To assess biological variables and their relationship to differences in personality, neurocognitive functioning, and use and abuse. The main analyses addressing the aims of this proposal will use as dependent variables either measures of psychological, social and health-related outcomes at age 28-31 or measures of drug use/abuse at age 28-31 and employ (1) correlational analyses (zero-order and partial correlations), (2) (multivariate) hierarchical multiple regression in the case of continuous dependent variables (logistic regression in the case of dichotomous dependent variables), and/or (3) structural equation modeling. Independent variables will generally include indicators of drug use history/prototype, age, gender, and developmental antecedents measured at earlier ages.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01DA003395-14
Application #
2749028
Study Section
Human Development Research Subcommittee (NIDA)
Program Officer
Erinoff, Lynda
Project Start
1983-07-01
Project End
2001-07-31
Budget Start
1998-08-01
Budget End
1999-07-31
Support Year
14
Fiscal Year
1998
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Rutgers University
Department
Psychology
Type
Other Domestic Higher Education
DUNS #
038633251
City
New Brunswick
State
NJ
Country
United States
Zip Code
08901
Rocque, Michael; Posick, Chad; White, Helene R (2015) GROWING UP IS HARD TO DO: AN EMPIRICAL EVALUATION OF MATURATION AND DESISTANCE. J Dev Life Course Criminol 1:350-384
Anderson, Kristen G; Sitney, Miranda; White, Helene R (2015) Marijuana motivations across adolescence: impacts on use and consequences. Subst Use Misuse 50:292-301
White, Helene R; Ray, Anne E (2014) Differential evaluations of alcohol-related consequences among emerging adults. Prev Sci 15:115-24
Anderson, Kristen G; Briggs, Kristen E L; White, Helene R (2013) Motives to drink or not to drink: longitudinal relations among personality, motives, and alcohol use across adolescence and early adulthood. Alcohol Clin Exp Res 37:860-7
White, Helene Raskin; Widom, Cathy Spatz; Chen, Ping-Hsin (2007) Congruence between adolescents'self-reports and their adult retrospective reports regarding parental discipline practices during their adolescence. Psychol Rep 101:1079-94
Widom, Cathy Spatz; Schuck, Amie M; White, Helene Raskin (2006) An examination of pathways from childhood victimization to violence: the role of early aggression and problematic alcohol use. Violence Vict 21:675-90
Rosenfield, Sarah; Lennon, Mary Clare; White, Helene Raskin (2005) The self and mental health: self-salience and the emergence of internalizing and externalizing problems. J Health Soc Behav 46:323-40
Bates, Marsha E; Lemay Jr, Edward P (2004) The d2 Test of attention: construct validity and extensions in scoring techniques. J Int Neuropsychol Soc 10:392-400
White, Helene R; Nagin, Daniel; Replogle, Elaine et al. (2004) Racial differences in trajectories of cigarette use. Drug Alcohol Depend 76:219-27
Fals-Stewart, William; Bates, Marsha E (2003) The neuropsychological test performance of drug-abusing patients: an examination of latent cognitive abilities and associated risk factors. Exp Clin Psychopharmacol 11:34-45

Showing the most recent 10 out of 67 publications