
 Alcohol use motives are closely associated with specific profiles of alcohol use  and reflect a subjectively derived decisional framework based on a motivational  style of responding. Adult twin studies typically estimate the heritability of  alcohol use motives to be between 7 and 42%, although relatively little is known  about genetic and environmental influences upon alcohol use motives in  adolescence.
 Latent class analysis (LCA) models containing 1 through 5  classes were fitted to the data derived from 1,422 adolescent twin and siblings  self-reported alcohol use motives. Using twin models, we estimated the genetic,  shared, and nonshared environmental influences to the class membership data  derived from the LCA.
 Four drinking motives classes were identified  (family-oriented, social, enhancement/social, and coping/social). The  coping/social and enhancement/social classes were differentiated from the social  class on measures of depression, delinquency, and aggressive behavior. Analyses  indicated that nonadditive genetic factors accounted for 76% of the variance in  the coping/social motives class and additive genetic influences accounted for  66% of the variance in the social motives class. There was a moderate  contribution of genetic factors and shared environmental factors influencing  class membership of enhancement/social motivated drinkers (28 and 20% explained  variance, respectively). Substantial shared environmental influences were  revealed for membership of the family-oriented class (75%).
 Heritable influences may predispose individuals to drink  to cope with negative affect, for social reasons, and to a lesser extent for  enhancement. Familial environmental influences shape family-oriented motives for  drinking in adolescents.
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Request Reprint E-Mail: clare.mackie@kcl.ac.uk
 
