Skip to main navigation Skip to search Skip to main content

Making Decisions With Trees: Examining Marijuana Outcomes Among College Students Using Recursive Partitioning

  • Adam D. Wilson
  • , Kevin S. Montes
  • , Adrian J. Bravo
  • , Bradley T. Conner
  • , Matthew R. Pearson
  • , Amber M. Anthenien
  • , Bradley T. Conner
  • , Christopher J. Correia
  • , Robert D. Dvorak
  • , Gregory A. Egerton
  • , John T.P. Hustad
  • , Tatyana Kholodkov
  • , Kevin M. King
  • , Bruce S. Liese
  • , Bryan G. Messina
  • , James G. Murphy
  • , Clayton Neighbors
  • , Xuan Thanh Nguyen
  • , Jamie E. Parnes
  • , Matthew R. Pearson
  • Eric R. Pedersen, Mark A. Prince, Sharon A. Radomski, Lara A. Ray, Jennifer P. Read
    • University of New Mexico
    • Colorado State University
    • University of Houston
    • Auburn University
    • University of Central Florida
    • SUNY Buffalo
    • Pennsylvania State University
    • University of Wyoming
    • University of Washington
    • University of Kansas
    • University of Memphis
    • University of California at Los Angeles
    • RAND Corporation

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    14 Scopus citations

    Abstract

    Exploratory analyses were used to identify a unique constellation of variables that are associated with marijuana use outcomes among college students. We used recursive partitioning to examine more than 100 putative antecedents of lifetime marijuana user status, past-month marijuana user status, and negative marijuana-related consequences. Participants (N = 8,141) completed measures online across 11 sites in the United States. Norms (descriptive, injunctive, and internalized norms) and marijuana identity best distinguished marijuana users from nonusers (i.e., lifetime/past month), whereas marijuana use frequency, use of protective behavioral strategies, and positive/negative urgency best distinguished the degree to which users reported negative consequences. Our results demonstrate that tree-based modeling is a useful methodological tool in the selection of targets for future clinical research. Additional research is needed to determine if these factors are causal antecedents, rather than consequences or epiphenomena. We hope this large sample study provides the impetus to develop intervention strategies targeting these factors.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)744-754
    Number of pages11
    JournalClinical Psychological Science
    Volume6
    Issue number5
    DOIs
    StatePublished - Sep 1 2018

    Keywords

    • marijuana consequences
    • marijuana identity
    • norms
    • protective behavioral strategies
    • recursive partitioning

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of 'Making Decisions With Trees: Examining Marijuana Outcomes Among College Students Using Recursive Partitioning'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this