Expanded consideration of a variety of concepts and methods, from
associative learning to econometrics, lends further support to the
accumulated consensus that tobacco advertising plays a role, with other
factors, in inducing young people to smoke. A point by point rebuttal
of issues raised by both Reitter (JAR 43, 1 [2003]:
12–13) and Taylor and Bonner (this issue) makes the case that
tobacco advertising is not an exception to the rule: advertising works
and it works in part by building primary demand. On a broader, more
paradigmatic note, the role of correlation and causation are discussed
within a convergence or triangulation framework.