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Race and Sex Differences in the Measurement of Risk for Drug Use

NCJ Number
168733
Journal
Journal of Quantitative Criminology Volume: 13 Issue: 3 Dated: September 1997 Pages: 325-347
Author(s)
D C Gottfredson; C S Koper
Date Published
1997
Length
23 pages
Annotation
This study used data from 2,018 black and white males and females, as well as latent-variable structural equations techniques, to examine group differences in the measure of risk factors for substance use.
Abstract
First, the equivalence of measurement models for four demographic groups was examined separately for 12 risk factors and two measures of substance use. Then these 14 measures were correlated with five external criteria to assess measurement validity. Results imply that one measurement model fits the data for 11 of the 12 risk factors. For one risk factor (peer drug modeling) and the two drug-use scales, observed group differences in the factor loadings stemmed from differences in the distributions of a few drug-related items that were infrequently endorsed, especially by black females. No meaningful group differences in the validity coefficients that related the scales to external criteria were observed. The results are optimistic for the study of race and gender differences in the correlates of substance use. Research on group differences in the prediction of rare behaviors should examine group differences in distributions that may affect measurement differently for different groups. 7 tables, 1 figures, and 43 references