Cover of: The (In)congruence Between Stated and Revealed Preferences: The Role of Substance Use Dependence
Holly Nguyen, Zachary Rowan, Anna Newell, Laurence Steinberg, Elizabeth Cauffman

The (In)congruence Between Stated and Revealed Preferences: The Role of Substance Use Dependence

Section: Conference Article 1
Volume 181 (2025) / Issue 1, pp. 5-32 (28)
Published 08.05.2025
DOI 10.1628/jite-2025-0020
  • article PDF
  • available
  • 10.1628/jite-2025-0020
Summary
Examining the congruence, or consistency, between stated (expressed attitudes, beliefs) and revealed preferences (observed behavior) may be instrumental in understanding criminal decision making. To study this, we focus on the incongruence between stated preferences for staying out of trouble with the law and self-reported criminal behavior and draw from trait theories, social control and behavioral addictions to develop exploratory hypotheses. Data from the Pathways to Desistance and Crossroads studies were used to estimate group-based trajectory models. Results show heterogeneous trends in congruence. Specifically, substance dependence is significantly related to an increase in the probability of incongruence across all trajectory groups.