R
Richard Rende
Researcher at Brown University
Publications - 29
Citations - 1886
Richard Rende is an academic researcher from Brown University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Anxiety & Sibling. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 29 publications receiving 1761 citations. Previous affiliations of Richard Rende include Miriam Hospital.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Parental Smoking and Adolescent Smoking Initiation: An Intergenerational Perspective on Tobacco Control
Stephen E. Gilman,Richard Rende,Julie Boergers,Julie Boergers,David B. Abrams,Stephen L. Buka,Melissa A. Clark,Suzanne M. Colby,Brian Hitsman,Alessandra Kazura,Lewis P. Lipsitt,Elizabeth E. Lloyd-Richardson,Michelle L. Rogers,Cassandra A. Stanton,Laura R. Stroud,Raymond Niaura +15 more
TL;DR: Parental smoking is an important source of vulnerability to smoking initiation among adolescents, and parental smoking cessation might attenuate this vulnerability.
Journal ArticleDOI
Sisters, brothers, and delinquency: evaluating social influence during early and middle adolescence.
TL;DR: It is proposed that sisters, like brothers, show notable similarity for delinquent behavior, and also promote each other's delinquency through direct interaction.
Journal ArticleDOI
Educational attainment and cigarette smoking: a causal association?
Stephen E. Gilman,Laurie Martin,David B. Abrams,Ichiro Kawachi,Laura D. Kubzansky,Eric B. Loucks,Richard Rende,Rima E. Rudd,Stephen L. Buka +8 more
TL;DR: A substantial portion of the education differential in smoking that has been repeatedly observed is attributable to factors shared by siblings that contribute to shortened educational careers and to lifetime smoking trajectories.
Journal ArticleDOI
Sibling effects on smoking in adolescence: evidence for social influence from a genetically informative design
TL;DR: This report extends prior research on sibling effects on smoking by identifying specific relationship dynamics that underlie transmission of risk within sibships and providing evidence that such relationship dynamics represent social rather than genetic processes.
Journal ArticleDOI
Parental smoking exposure and adolescent smoking trajectories
TL;DR: Exposure to parental nicotine dependence is a critical factor influencing intergenerational transmission of smoking and research is needed to optimize interventions to help nicotine-dependent parents quit smoking early in their children’s lifetime to reduce these risks.