The promise and challenges of intensive longitudinal designs for imbalance models of adolescent substance use

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Abstract

Imbalance models of adolescent brain development attribute the increasing engagement in substance use during adolescence to within-person changes in the functional balance between the neural systems underlying socio-emotional, incentive processing, and cognitive control. However, the experimental designs and analytic techniques used to date do not lend themselves to explicit tests of how within-person change and within-person variability in socio-emotional processing and cognitive control place individual adolescents at risk for substance use. For a more complete articulation and a more stringent test of these models, we highlight the promise and challenges of using intensive longitudinal designs and analysis techniques that encompass many (often > 10) within-person measurement occasions. Use of intensive longitudinal designs will lend researchers the tools required to make within-person inferences in individual adolescents that will ultimately align imbalance models of adolescent substance use with the methodological frameworks used to test them.

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Lydon-Staley, D. M., & Bassett, D. S. (2018). The promise and challenges of intensive longitudinal designs for imbalance models of adolescent substance use. Frontiers in Psychology, 9(AUG). https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01576

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