Forty years ago, when the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) was founded, alcoholism was considered an adult disease driven principally by physiological determinants. As NIAAA expanded its research portfolio, new data and insights were obtained that led to an increased focus on underage and young adult drinking. Fostered by interdisciplinary research, etiologic models were developed that recognized the multiplicity of relevant genetic and environmental influences. This shift in conceptualizing alcohol use disorders also was based on findings from large-scale, national studies indicating that late adolescence and early young adulthood were peak periods for the development of alcohol dependence and that early initiatio...
Adolescents ages 10–15 experience dramatic changes in their biological, cognitive, emotional, and so...
openness of communication with parents on typologies of adolescent alcohol use and the subsequent ri...
Underage alcohol use can be viewed as a developmental phenomenon because many kinds of developmental...
Adolescents ages 10-15 experience dramatic changes in their biological, cognitive, emotional, and so...
Adolescents ages 10–15 experience dramatic changes in their biological, cognitive, emotional, and so...
There is ample evidence that the early initiation of alcohol use is a risk factor for the developmen...
Late adolescence (i.e., the age-group between 16 and 20 years) is characterized by significant chang...
Alcohol is the substance most frequently used by youth. According to 2002 data from Monitoring the F...
Late adolescence (i.e., the agegroup between 16 and 20 years) is characterized by significant change...
OBJECTIVE: This study examined the level, changes and predictors of alcohol consumption and binge dr...
Alcohol is responsible for a significant portion of the global burden of disease. There is widesprea...
As part of the ongoing Collaborative Study of the Genetics of Alcoholism, we performed a longitudina...
Aims: Alcohol use disorders (AUDs) are highly disabling neuropsychiatric conditions. Although eviden...
Alcohol consumption strongly contributes to a global burden of disease and injury, with dependence-p...
and co-principal investigator on the Monitoring the Future study, both positions in Ann Arbor, Michi...
Adolescents ages 10–15 experience dramatic changes in their biological, cognitive, emotional, and so...
openness of communication with parents on typologies of adolescent alcohol use and the subsequent ri...
Underage alcohol use can be viewed as a developmental phenomenon because many kinds of developmental...
Adolescents ages 10-15 experience dramatic changes in their biological, cognitive, emotional, and so...
Adolescents ages 10–15 experience dramatic changes in their biological, cognitive, emotional, and so...
There is ample evidence that the early initiation of alcohol use is a risk factor for the developmen...
Late adolescence (i.e., the age-group between 16 and 20 years) is characterized by significant chang...
Alcohol is the substance most frequently used by youth. According to 2002 data from Monitoring the F...
Late adolescence (i.e., the agegroup between 16 and 20 years) is characterized by significant change...
OBJECTIVE: This study examined the level, changes and predictors of alcohol consumption and binge dr...
Alcohol is responsible for a significant portion of the global burden of disease. There is widesprea...
As part of the ongoing Collaborative Study of the Genetics of Alcoholism, we performed a longitudina...
Aims: Alcohol use disorders (AUDs) are highly disabling neuropsychiatric conditions. Although eviden...
Alcohol consumption strongly contributes to a global burden of disease and injury, with dependence-p...
and co-principal investigator on the Monitoring the Future study, both positions in Ann Arbor, Michi...
Adolescents ages 10–15 experience dramatic changes in their biological, cognitive, emotional, and so...
openness of communication with parents on typologies of adolescent alcohol use and the subsequent ri...
Underage alcohol use can be viewed as a developmental phenomenon because many kinds of developmental...