Deutsch Arielle R, Steinley Douglas, Slutske Wendy S
Department of Psychological Sciences, University of Missouri-Columbia, 112 Psychology Building, Columbia, MO, 65211, USA,
J Youth Adolesc. 2014 Sep;43(9):1421-35. doi: 10.1007/s10964-013-0048-9. Epub 2013 Oct 30.
Although socializing effects of friends' drinking on adolescent drinking behavior have been firmly established in previous literature, study results on the importance of gender, as well as the specific role that gender may play in peer socialization, are very mixed. Given the increasing importance of gender in friendships (particularly opposite-sex friendships) during adolescence, it is necessary to better understand the nuanced roles that gender can play in peer socialization effects on alcohol use. In addition, previous studies focusing on the interplay between individual gender and friends' gender have been largely dyadic; less is known about potential gendered effects of broader social networks. The current study sought to further investigate potential effects of gender on friends' influence on adolescent drinking behavior with particular emphasis on the number of same-sex and opposite-sex friends within one's friendship network, as well as closeness to these friends. Using Waves I and II of the saturated sample of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Add Health), adolescent friendship networks were used to calculate the mean drinking behaviors of adolescent friends. Multi-level models estimated the effects of individual drinking behaviors, friend drinking behaviors, and school-level drinking behaviors on adolescent drinking 1 year later, as well as moderating effects of gender composition of friendship groups and male and female friend closeness on the relationship between friends' drinking behaviors and adolescent drinking behavior. Results documented that gender composition of friendship groups did not influence the effect of friends' drinking on individual drinking 1 year later. However, closeness to friends did influence this relationship. As closeness to male friends decreased, the influence of their drinking behavior increased, for both boys and girls. A similar effect was found for female friends, but only for boys. Female friend closeness did not affect the relationship between peer alcohol socialization and girls' alcohol use. The findings indicate that the role of gender on alcohol socialization may be more complex than previously thought, particularly when examining the potential role that alcohol use may play as a mechanism for social bonding within opposite-sex friendships and same-sex male friendships.
尽管朋友饮酒对青少年饮酒行为的社交影响在以往文献中已得到确凿证实,但关于性别的重要性以及性别在同伴社交中可能发挥的具体作用的研究结果却非常复杂。鉴于青春期性别在友谊(尤其是异性友谊)中的重要性日益凸显,有必要更好地理解性别在同伴社交对饮酒影响方面所起的细微作用。此外,以往关注个体性别与朋友性别的相互作用的研究大多是二元的;对于更广泛社交网络的潜在性别影响了解较少。本研究旨在进一步调查性别对朋友对青少年饮酒行为影响的潜在作用,特别强调友谊网络中同性和异性朋友的数量以及与这些朋友的亲密程度。利用全国青少年健康纵向研究(Add Health)饱和样本的第一波和第二波数据,通过青少年友谊网络来计算青少年朋友的平均饮酒行为。多层次模型估计了个体饮酒行为、朋友饮酒行为和学校层面饮酒行为对一年后青少年饮酒行为的影响,以及友谊群体的性别构成和男女朋友亲密程度对朋友饮酒行为与青少年饮酒行为之间关系的调节作用。结果表明,友谊群体的性别构成在一年后并未影响朋友饮酒对个体饮酒的作用。然而,与朋友的亲密程度确实影响了这种关系。随着与男性朋友亲密程度的降低,他们饮酒行为对男孩和女孩的影响都增加了。女性朋友也有类似的影响,但仅对男孩而言。女性朋友的亲密程度并未影响同伴饮酒社交与女孩饮酒行为之间的关系。研究结果表明,性别在酒精社交中的作用可能比之前认为的更为复杂,尤其是在研究饮酒作为异性友谊和同性男性友谊中社会联结机制可能发挥的潜在作用时。