2012
DOI: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2011.12.018
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Common liability to addiction and “gateway hypothesis”: Theoretical, empirical and evolutionary perspective

Abstract: Background Two competing concepts address the development of involvement with psychoactive substances: the “gateway hypothesis” (GH) and common liability to addiction (CLA). Method The literature on theoretical foundations and empirical findings related to both concepts is reviewed. Results The data suggest that drug use initiation sequencing, the core GH element, is variable and opportunistic rather than uniform and developmentally deterministic. The association between risks for use of different substanc… Show more

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Cited by 362 publications
(318 citation statements)
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References 135 publications
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“…The factors involved in the physiological response to drugs, on the other hand, are less influenced by social environment, as they include drug metabolism and neurochemistry of drug response. Many of behavior regulation mechanisms, however, are also involved in the development of physical dependence [29][30][31][32], placing premorbid behavior, dependence, and addiction to a substantial degree on the same dimension.…”
Section: Resistance To Drug Addictionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The factors involved in the physiological response to drugs, on the other hand, are less influenced by social environment, as they include drug metabolism and neurochemistry of drug response. Many of behavior regulation mechanisms, however, are also involved in the development of physical dependence [29][30][31][32], placing premorbid behavior, dependence, and addiction to a substantial degree on the same dimension.…”
Section: Resistance To Drug Addictionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These characteristics combine with affect change and other incentives for drug use. Euphoria may have evolved as an indicator of the positive Darwinian value of an experience, but it is possible that the true indicator of a Darwinian fitnesssignificant behavior is any positive affect change rather than necessarily euphoria [31]. Norm violation and rebelliousness, elevated novelty-seeking and risk-taking, are common features of adolescence [47], especially when exacerbated by maturational mistiming [48].…”
Section: Systematic Reviewsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We introduce the concept of Bprevescalation^(pronounced Bpri-ves-kuh-ley-shuhn^) to capture the need and opportunity to prevent the escalation of risk behaviors that typically occur during young adulthood, with a focus on the example of cigarette smoking. However, since risky behaviors often travel together because of shared vulnerability (Vanyukov et al 2012), the core concept of prevescalation may apply to other risky behaviors that support one another and become entrenched and harder to change in later adulthood. We discuss the need to target this transitional phase, what we know about behavioral pathways and predictors of cigarette smoking, and potential intervention considerations and research challenges.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Secondly, we describe, associations of vape shop visitation with quitting intentions and behaviors among tobacco users. In line with the common liability model, 12,13 we would expect that young adult vape shop visitors would be more likely than non-visitors to use e-cigarettes, other tobacco products, and other substances. Findings from this study will inform future research on reasons for visiting vape shops, the impact of federal and state regulation on these establishments, and how visiting vape shops affects health behavior.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…7 Young adult past 30-day e-cigarette users compared with those with no past-month use have also reported higher prevalence of marijuana use (some days or ever day 10 or in the past 12 months 11 ), some days or every day alcohol use, 10 past 30-day binge drinking, 11 and past 30-day other tobacco (defined as use of cigars, pipes, chewing tobacco, snuff, snus, hookah, clove cigarettes, bidis, or other) product use 11 . This pattern of e-cigarette co-use with a variety of other substances may indicate a common liability to use addictive substances based on genetic, neurochemical, physiological, behavioral, and/ or environmental factors [12][13] . Additionally, over half of U.S. adults (55%) who tried e-cigarettes report that they used them to try to quit smoking cigarettes and e-cigarette users were significantly more likely to quit cigarettes for 24 hours than non-users.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%