Neurosciences des Croyances

Self-reported impulsivity, task-based inhibitory control, and early sipping behaviors as longitudinal predictors of adolescent alcohol use and problems in the ABCD Study.

medRxiv

Résumé

BACKGROUND: Early low-level alcohol use predicts subsequent alcohol use and problems. Impulsivity and poor inhibitory control also predict later problematic alcohol use. However, few studies prospectively examine early sipping in combination with modeling impulsivity and inhibitory control change over time as predictors of adolescent alcohol use.METHODS: Data Release 6.0 from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study was used (n=11,866; 48% Female). A series of linear mixed-effect models examined trajectories of non-religious sipping at baseline (ages 9-10) and self-reported impulsivity (UPPS-P) and task-based inhibitory control (Flanker task) over time as predictors of past year drinks and problematic alcohol use by ages 15-16. Predictors were run as separate models and a full model with all predictors together. Models were nested within the participant and study site. Interactions with age (to measure change over time from Baseline to Year 6) were included. Corrections for multiple comparisons were employed.RESULTS: In individual models, four impulsivity interactions were significant: (1) negative urgency*age (β=.04, FDR-

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