Research News

RIA, bullying center partner on grant

Adolescent violence.

The National Institute on Drug Abuse is funding a five-year, $3.4 million UB study examining violence, victimization and substance abuse among high-risk youth.

By CATHY WILDE

Published August 20, 2015 This content is archived.

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“Results from this study will help us understand the individual, family, peer and neighborhood factors that place youth at risk for violence and what protects them from engaging in violence. ”
Amanda Nickerson, director
Alberti Center for Bullying Abuse Prevention, UB Graduate School of Education

Scientists at UB's Research Institute on Addictions will collaborate with UB’s Alberti Center for Bullying Abuse Prevention for a five-year study examining violence, victimization and substance abuse among high-risk youth.

“In this study, we will examine some pathways from infancy to adolescence that explain how and under what conditions adolescents engage in violence, become victims of violence, and engage in substance use that increases the risk for violence and victimization,” says principal investigator Rina Das Eiden, senior research scientist at RIA.

Eiden’s co-principal investigator on the study is Amanda Nickerson, director of the Alberti Center for Bullying Abuse Prevention in UB’s Graduate School of Education.

“Dr. Nickerson brings expertise in the areas of bullying and victimization in adolescence and clinical experience in working with children who have experienced trauma,” Eiden says.

The study will look at more than 200 children Eiden has followed since birth and who are at high risk for negative outcomes because of their exposure to high rates of violence in their environments.

“Results from this study will help us understand the individual, family, peer and neighborhood factors that place youth at risk for violence and what protects them from engaging in violence,” Nickerson says. “This is important for informing the timing and content of prevention and intervention efforts.”

RIA Director Kenneth Leonard, praised the collaborative nature of the grant. “There are many psychological and social factors that have been implicated in youth violence,” he says. “Understanding the intricate links between these factors, substance use and the development of adolescent violence is best served by interdisciplinary collaborations between experts with different perspectives on the problem.”

The study is funded by a five-year, $3.4 million grant from the National Institute on Drug Abuse. Co-investigators include Joseph Lucke, senior research scientist at RIA; Jamie Ostrov, associate professor in UB’s Department of Psychology; Stephanie Godleski, assistant professor of psychology at Rochester Institute of Technology and former postdoctoral associate at RIA; Pamela Schuetze, professor, Department of Psychology at SUNY Buffalo State; and William Wieczorek, director, Center for Health and Social Research at SUNY Buffalo State.