Ar. Piquero et al., Assessing the impact of exposure time and incapacitation on longitudinal trajectories of criminal offending, J ADOLESC R, 16(1), 2001, pp. 54-74
The authors examine the potential effect of accounting for exposure time by
examining the arrests of 272 serious offenders who were paroled at age 18
and followed through age 33. The authors describe the overall change in the
arrest rate over the 16-year period, with and without adjustments for expo
sure rime. The authors also estimate latent class models that decompose the
heterogeneity of arrest rate trends, with and without variation in exposur
e time. Two results are noteworthy: (a) conclusions about the level of arre
st activity did depend on adjustments for exposure time, but the overall tr
end in arrest activity did not depend on these adjustments; and (b) latent
class analysis without exposure time adjustments suggested that more than 9
2% of the sample exhibited their highest level of arrest activity in late t
eens and early 20s; then offending dec[ined during the late 20s and early 3
0s. When adjusted for exposure time, the analysis revealed that about 72% o
f the sample exhibited this decline; the remainder remained quite active in
offending.