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Risk Taking and Externalizing Behaviors

Reciprocal Effects of Positive Future Expectations, Threats to Safety, and Risk Behavior Across Adolescence

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Pages 54-67 | Published online: 12 Sep 2016
 

Abstract

We examined the reciprocal relationships among positive future expectations, expected threats to future safety, depression, and individual substance use and delinquency using 4 waves of data (N = 248–338) from African American and Latino adolescent male participants in the Chicago Youth Development Study. Individual positive future expectations and expected threats to safety were assessed at each wave and modeled as latent constructs. Individual substance use and delinquency were assessed at each wave and represented as ordinal variables ranging from low to high. Categorical autoregressive cross-lagged structural models were used to examine the hypothesized reciprocal relationships between both aspects of future expectations construct and risk behavior across adolescence. Analyses show that future expectations has important effects on youth substance use and involvement in delinquency, both of which in turn decrease positive expectations and increase expectation of threats to future safety across adolescence. Similarly, low positive expectations for the future continued to predict increased substance use and involvement in delinquency. The expected threats to safety construct was significantly correlated with delinquency within time. These effects are observed across adolescence after controlling for youth depression and race. Findings support the reciprocal effects hypothesis of a negative reinforcing cycle in the relationships between future expectations and both substance use and involvement in delinquent behavior across adolescence. The enduring nature of these relationships underscores the importance of future expectation as a potential change mechanism for intervention and prevention efforts to promote healthy development; vulnerable racial and ethnic minority male adolescents may especially benefit from such intervention.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We gratefully acknowledge the support of the original study team and leads, Drs. Deborah Gorman Smith, David B. Henry, and Patrick Tolan for support in developing this work.

FUNDING

This publication was made possible with grant support from the National Center for Research Resources, a component of the National Institutes of Health (TL1 RR 025016), and the National Institute on Drug Abuse funded Postdoctoral Training Program (T32 DA019426).

Additional information

Funding

This publication was made possible with grant support from the National Center for Research Resources, a component of the National Institutes of Health (TL1 RR 025016), and the National Institute on Drug Abuse funded Postdoctoral Training Program (T32 DA019426).

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