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Dive into the research topics where Levent Kirisci is active.

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Featured researches published by Levent Kirisci.


Drug and Alcohol Dependence | 1998

Adolescent versus adult onset and the development of substance use disorders in males.

Duncan B. Clark; Levent Kirisci; Ralph E. Tarter

This study examines the influence of adolescent age of onset on the development of substance use disorders (SUD) by comparing adult males (n = 181) with SUD categorized into adolescent-onset, early-adult onset and late-adult onset groups on patterns of substance use and related disorders, time course of the development of substance dependence and rates of comorbid mental disorders. A sample of male adolescents (n = 81) with SUD was also included as a comparison group. The subjects were recruited from intervention programs in the community and participated in semistructured interviews with diagnoses determined by the best estimate method. Adolescent-onset adults, compared with other adult-onset groups, had higher lifetime rates of cannabis and hallucinogen use disorders, shorter times from first exposure to dependence, shorter times between the development of their first and second dependence diagnoses and higher rates of disruptive behavior disorders and major depression. Adolescents were similar to adolescent-onset adults. While the findings must be interpreted in light of methodological limitations, these results suggest that adolescent-onset SUD is a distinct subtype involving different substances and more rapid development than adult-onset SUD.


Clinical Psychology Review | 2002

Origins and consequences of child neglect in substance abuse families.

Marija G. Dunn; Ralph E. Tarter; Ada C. Mezzich; Michael Vanyukov; Levent Kirisci; Galina P. Kirillova

The empirical literature pertaining to the prevalence, origins, and consequences of neglectful parenting as it relates to substance abuse is critically reviewed. Available evidence indicates that children who experience parental neglect, with or without parental alcohol or drug abuse, are at high risk for substance use disorder (SUD). The effects of parental substance abuse on substance abuse outcome of their children appear to be partly mediated by their neglectful parenting. The discussion concludes with presentation of a developmental multifactorial model in which neglect, in conjunction with other individual and environmental factors, can be integratively investigated to quantify the childs overall liability across successive stages of development as well as to map the trajectory toward good and poor outcomes.


Journal of Abnormal Psychology | 2004

An application of item response theory analysis to alcohol, cannabis, and cocaine criteria in DSM-IV.

James W. Langenbucher; Erich Labouvie; Christopher S. Martin; Pilar M. Sanjuan; Lawrence Bavly; Levent Kirisci; Tammy Chung

Item response theory (IRT) is supplanting classical test theory as the basis for measures development. This study demonstrated the utility of IRT for evaluating DSM-IV diagnostic criteria. Data on alcohol, cannabis, and cocaine symptoms from 372 adult clinical participants interviewed with the Composite International Diagnostic Interview--Expanded Substance Abuse Module (CIDI-SAM) were analyzed with Mplus (B. Muthen & L. Muthen, 1998) and MULTILOG (D. Thissen, 1991) software. Tolerance and legal problems criteria were dropped because of poor fit with a unidimensional model. Item response curves, test information curves, and testing of variously constrained models suggested that DSM-IV criteria in the CIDI-SAM discriminate between only impaired and less impaired cases and may not be useful to scale case severity. IRT can be used to study the construct validity of DSM-IV diagnoses and to identify diagnostic criteria with poor performance.


Child Abuse & Neglect | 1999

Child abuse potential in parents with histories of substance use disorder.

Robert T. Ammerman; David J. Kolko; Levent Kirisci; Timothy C. Blackson; Michael A. Dawes

OBJECTIVE To examine the relationship between parental history of substances use disorders (SUDs) and abuse potential. METHOD Milners (1986) Child Abuse Potential Inventory (CAPI) was administered to fathers and mothers (with and without histories of SUDs) of 10- to 12-year-old boys. RESULTS Fathers and mothers with lifetime histories of SUDs had higher Abuse Scale scores and were more likely to score in the Elevated range (as determined by clinically significant cutoff scores) than parents without such histories. No differences were found between parents with current diagnoses of SUD and those with past (but not current) histories of SUD. Fathers and mothers with a partner who had a history of SUD were more likely to score in the Elevated range, regardless of their own SUD histories. Separate regression models revealed that, for both fathers and mothers, emotional dysregulation (positive and negative affectivity) predicted Abuse Scale scores. Additional contributors to Abuse Scale scores were SUD status in fathers, and lack of involvement with the child in mothers. CONCLUSIONS History of SUDs in both fathers and mothers increases abuse potential. Contributors to abuse potential differed in fathers and mothers, underscoring the importance of examining parents separately in child maltreatment research.


Applied Psychological Measurement | 1996

Monte Carlo Studies in Item Response Theory

Michael R. Harwell; Clement A. Stone; Tse Chi Hsu; Levent Kirisci

Monte carlo studies are being used in item response theory (IRT) to provide information about how validly these methods can be applied to realistic datasets (e.g., small numbers of examinees and multidimensional data). This paper describes the conditions under which monte carlo studies are appropriate in IRT-based re search, the kinds of problems these techniques have been applied to, available computer programs for gen erating item responses and estimating item and exam inee parameters, and the importance of conceptualizing these studies as statistical sampling experiments that should be subject to the same principles of experimen tal design and data analysis that pertain to empirical studies. The number of replications that should be used in these studies is also addressed.


Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews | 2003

Liability to substance use disorders: 1. Common mechanisms and manifestations

Michael Vanyukov; Ralph E. Tarter; Levent Kirisci; Galina P. Kirillova; Brion S. Maher; Duncan B. Clark

Variation in the risk for and severity of substance use disorders (SUD) in the population is caused by multiple organismic (genetic, biochemical, psychological) and environmental factors. Whereas drug- or drug-class-specific liability mechanisms exist, a substantial proportion of variance in the risk is shared between specific liabilities, reflecting mechanisms that determine common liability to SUD. Data from epidemiologic, clinical, psychological, physiological, biochemical, and family and genetic studies reviewed in this paper indicate the existence of mechanisms and characteristics shared in common by liabilities to SUD related to different drugs. These mechanisms can be conceptualized as common liability to SUD, a latent trait accounting for a substantial portion of variation in SUD risk and severity and determined by all factors influencing the probability of SUD development. An accompanying paper describes an approach to the quantitative estimation of this trait.


Journal of Abnormal Psychology | 2006

Item response theory analysis of diagnostic criteria for alcohol and cannabis use disorders in adolescents: implications for DSM-V.

Christopher S. Martin; Tammy Chung; Levent Kirisci; James W. Langenbucher

Item response theory (IRT) has advantages over classical test theory in evaluating diagnostic criteria. In this study, the authors used IRT to characterize the psychometric properties of Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th edition (DSM-IV; American Psychiatric Association, 1994) alcohol and cannabis use disorder symptoms among 472 clinical adolescents. For both substances, DSM-IV symptoms fit a model specifying a unidimensional latent trait of problem severity. Threshold (severity) parameters did not distinguish abuse and dependence symptoms. Abuse symptoms of legal problems and hazardous use, and dependence symptoms of tolerance, unsuccessful attempts to quit, and physical-psychological problems, showed relatively poor discrimination of problem severity. There were gender differences in thresholds for hazardous use, legal problems, and physical-psychological problems. The results illustrate limitations of DSM-IV criteria for alcohol and cannabis use disorders when applied to adolescents. The development process for the fifth edition (DSM-V) should be informed by statistical models such as those used in this study.


Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | 1999

Association between hyperactivity and executive cognitive functioning in childhood and substance use in early adolescence.

Sema Aytaclar; Ralph E. Tarter; Levent Kirisci; Sandy Lu

OBJECTIVE To determine whether deficient executive cognitive functioning (ECF) in association with high behavioral activity level comprise components of the liability to substance abuse. METHOD A high-risk (HR) group having fathers with a lifetime DSM-III-R diagnosis of a psychoactive substance use disorder was compared with a low-average-risk (LAR) group whose fathers had neither psychoactive substance use disorder nor another adult Axis I psychiatric disorder. ECF and behavioral activity were measured using neuropsychological tests, activity monitor, diagnostic interview, and informant ratings when the subjects were 10 to 12 years of age. Alcohol, tobacco, and cannabis use were measured at 2-year follow-up. RESULTS At baseline, the HR group had a significantly higher behavioral activity level and exhibited poorer performance on ECF tests than the LAR group. By early adolescence, HR subjects had a higher lifetime rate of tobacco and cannabis use and earlier age at onset of cannabis use. ECF capacity, but not behavioral activity level, predicted tobacco and cannabis use, total number of drugs ever tried, and severity of drug involvement. ECF accounted for additional variance beyond the effects of conduct problems on these outcomes. CONCLUSION Whereas behavioral activity and ECF capacity in late childhood distinguishes HR from LAR youth, childhood ECF capacity is the more salient predictor of drug use in early adolescence.


Addictive Behaviors | 1995

Norms and sensitivity of the adolescent version of the drug use screening inventory

Levent Kirisci; Ada C. Mezzich; Ralph E. Tarter

The distribution and the statistical accuracy of scores on the Drug Use Screening Inventory (DUSI) and the discriminative power of the DUSI for identifying individuals who qualify for a DSM-III-R diagnosis of Psychoactive Substance Use Disorder (PSUD) were examined in 846 adolescents. The subjects with PSUD had higher mean scores, and the distribution of their scores approximated a normal distribution in each of the 10 domains measured by the DUSI. All of the DUSI domains yielded more precise trait estimates for the subjects who had more severe PSUD. Within the normal sample, using a score of 30 on the overall problem density index as the cutoff score, the DUSI correctly classified 95% of the normal sample and 81% of the PSUD cases.


Drug and Alcohol Dependence | 1997

Behavioral self-regulation: Correlates and 2 year follow-ups for boys at risk for substance abuse

Michael A. Dawes; Ralph E. Tarter; Levent Kirisci

This investigation demonstrated the heuristic construct of behavioral self-regulation (BSR) as a salient component of the liability to substance abuse. Three dimensions of childhood behaviour were employed to create a dimensional model of BSR: inattention, impulsivity/hyperactivity and aggressivity. Multiple measures and multiple informants were employed to develop indices of the three traits in a sample of 10-12 year old sons of substance abusing fathers (high risk (HR); n = 180) and normal controls (low average risk (LAR); n = 200). Informants included mothers, boys and their teachers. The results confirmed the presence of a first-order latent trait of BSR. HR boys had significantly higher scores on BSR than LAR boys. Concurrent validity of the BSR trait scores was supported by significant associations with measures of family dysfunction, deviant peer affiliations and poor school performance. These latter problems are commonly prodromal to substance abuse. Predictive validity of the BSR trait baseline scores (age 10-12 years) was supported at 2 year follow-up by significant associations of BSR scores with magnitude of deviant peer affiliations; trends toward significance were found for family dysfunction and poor school performance. Taken together, these results confirm and extend previous findings which indicate that poor BSR is prodromal to substance abuse.

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Ada C. Mezzich

University of Pittsburgh

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Ty A. Ridenour

University of Pittsburgh

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Howard B. Moss

University of Pittsburgh

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Juan E. Mezzich

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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