In this study, Dr. Paula Nurius, CCFW Academic Partner, and colleagues address the relevance of early life adversity for adult health with several features that extend research to date.
Measurement invariance testing of a three-factor model of parental warmth, psychological control, and knowledge across European American and Asian/Pacific Islander American youth
Dr. Kevin King and colleagues used a multiple-group confirmatory factor analysis to examine whether the latent structure of parenting measures are equivalent or different across European and Asian/Pacific Islander American youth.
Variable- and person-centered approaches to examining temperament vulnerability and resilience to the effects of contextual risk
Using both variable- and person-centered approaches, this study examined the role of temperament in relation to children’s vulnerable or resilient responses to cumulative risk.
Examining daily variability in willingness to drink in relation to young adult alcohol use
In this study, Dr. Kevin King and colleagues empirically tested the utility of the social reaction pathway of the Prototype Willingness Model in the prediction of drinking behavior at the daily level.
Cultural orientation trajectories and substance use: Findings from a longitudinal study of Mexican-origin youth
Dr. Kevin King collaborated with Dr. Rick A. Cruz, Utah State University, and other colleagues to use longitudinal data to examine whether cultural adaptation patterns were associated with differential substance use risk.
Stress pathways to health disparities: Embedding ACEs within social and behavioral contexts
In this study, CCFW Academic Partner Dr. Paula Nurius and colleagues addresses whether adverse childhood experiences demonstrate disproportional prevalence across demographic- and health-affecting characteristics…