RT Article T1 Mediating the Worst of Both Worlds effect with facets of criminal thought process: moral neutralization, cognitive impulsivity, and their interaction JF Deviant behavior VO 44 IS 10 SP 1427 OP 1442 A1 Walters, Glenn D. 1954- A2 Kremser, Jonathan A2 Runell, Lindsey L. LA English YR 2023 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1870049071 AB The Worst of Both Worlds (WBW) hypothesis holds that prior offending and substance use in combination is significantly more likely to lead to antisocial behavior than either prior offending or prior substance use alone. In an effort to better understand the mechanisms behind the WBW effect, we performed a causal mediation analysis in which moral neutralization and cognitive impulsivity served as mediators of the WBW-delinquency relationship in a group of 845 (406 boys, 439 girls) early adolescents. We then tested the indirect effect for each pathway using longitudinal data and bias-corrected bootstrapped confidence intervals. Results showed that moral neutralization, but not cognitive impulsivity or the neutralization x impulsivity interaction, mediated the relationship between WBW and delinquency. These findings indicate that moral neutralization may play a salient role in the WBW effect by linking offending-substance comorbidity to future antisocial behavior. There is a need for additional research, however, to ascertain how and why comorbid criminal offending and substance use/abuse link specifically to moral neutralization, whereas there appears to be no connection between crime-substance comorbidity and cognitive impulsivity. NO Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 1440-1442 K1 Kriminelles Verhalten K1 Drogenkonsum K1 Vorstrafen K1 Kriminelle Karriere K1 Theorie DO 10.1080/01639625.2023.2207710