Table 4.
2. | 3. | 4. | 5. | 6. | 7. | 8. | 9. | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. Posttraumatic Stress Disorder | .37** | .25** | .29** | .25** | .27** | .12* | .26** | −.07 |
2. Major depressive disorder | .27** | .23** | .23** | .25** | .25** | .25** | −.01 | |
3. Coping Motives | .56** | .61** | .37** | .32** | .38** | −.09 | ||
4. Sleep Motives | .60** | .61** | .32** | .44** | −.28** | |||
5. Situational Anxiety Motives | .37** | .22** | .27** | −.11 | ||||
6. Cannabis use | .33** | .62** | −.27** | |||||
7. Cannabis-related problems | .40** | −.08 | ||||||
8. Cannabis use disorder | −.14* | |||||||
9. Age | - |
Notes.
p ≤ .05.
p ≤ .01.
***p ≤ .001.
Correlations among continuous variables are Pearson correlations; correlations among categorical variables are phi coefficients, and correlations between continuous and categorical variables are point-biserial correlations. For the purposes of the correlation matrix, cannabis use was treated as a continuous variable, although it is treated as an ordered categorical variable in regression analyses.