Osgood D Wayne, Ragan Daniel T, Wallace Lacey, Gest Scott D, Feinberg Mark E, Moody James
Crime, Law and Justice Program, Department of Sociology, Pennsylvania State University, 211 Oswald Tower, University Park, PA 16802.
J Res Adolesc. 2013 Sep 1;23(3). doi: 10.1111/jora.12059.
This study addresses not only influence and selection of friends as sources of similarity in alcohol use, but also peer processes leading drinkers to be chosen as friends more often than non-drinkers, which increases the number of adolescents subject to their influence. Analyses apply a stochastic actor-based model to friendship networks assessed five times from 6 through 9 grades for 50 grade cohort networks in Iowa and Pennsylvania, which include 13,214 individuals. Results show definite influence and selection for similarity in alcohol use, as well as reciprocal influences between drinking and frequently being chosen as a friend. These findings suggest that adolescents view alcohol use as an attractive, high status activity and that friendships expose adolescents to opportunities for drinking.
本研究不仅探讨了作为饮酒相似性来源的朋友的影响和选择,还研究了导致饮酒者比不饮酒者更常被选为朋友的同伴过程,这增加了受其影响的青少年数量。分析采用基于随机行为者的模型,对爱荷华州和宾夕法尼亚州50个年级队列网络中6至9年级的友谊网络进行了五次评估,这些网络包括13214名个体。结果表明,在饮酒方面存在明显的影响和相似性选择,以及饮酒与经常被选为朋友之间的相互影响。这些发现表明,青少年将饮酒视为一种有吸引力、地位高的活动,而友谊使青少年有更多饮酒机会。