An Exploration of Childhood Antecedents of Female Adult Malaise in Two British Birth Cohorts: Combining Bayesian Model Averaging and Recursive Partitioning
64 Pages Posted: 14 Jul 2008
Date Written: March 2005
Abstract
We use information from two prospective British birth cohort studies to explore the antecedents of adult malaise, an indicator of incipient depression. These studies include a wealth of information on childhood circumstances, behaviour, test scores and family background, measured several times during childhood. We are concerned both with incorporating model uncertainty and using a person-centred approach. We explore associations in both cohorts using two separate approaches: Bayesian model averaging (BMA) and recursive trees. The first approach permits us to assess model uncertainty, necessary because many childhood antecedents are highly correlated. BMA also aims to produce more robust results for extrapolation to other data sets through averaging over the range of plausible models. The second approach is concerned with partitioning the sample, through a series of binary splits, into groups of people who are as alike as possible. One advantage is that the approach is person-centred in that it retains real groups of respondents. We compare and contrast the insights obtained from the two approaches and use the results from each to inform the other and thus refine our understanding further. Moreover, we explore the claimed added robustness for extrapolation by using a split-sample for the 1970 cohort. The consistency of results across methods and cohorts is discussed throughout.
JEL Classification: I10, C11, C14
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Childhood Poverty, Early Motherhood and Adult Social Exclusion
By John Hobcraft and K. Kiernan
-
The Roles of Schooling and Educational Qualifications in the Emergence of Adult Social Exclusion
-
Continuity and Change in Pathways to Young Adult Disadvantage: Results from a British Birth Cohort
-
Intergenerational and Life-Course Transmission of Social Exclusion in the 1970 British Cohort Study
-
Growing Up: School, Family and Area Influences on Adolescents Later Life Chances
By Karen Gardiner and Carol Propper
-
By Darcy Hango