Li Yi, Guo Guang
The Australian National University, Acton, ACT, Australia
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
J Health Soc Behav. 2016 Sep;57(3):297-318. doi: 10.1177/0022146516661594.
Identifying casual peer influence is a long-standing challenge to social scientists. Using data from a natural experiment of randomly-assigned college roommates (N = 2,059), which removes the threat of friend selection, we investigate peer effects on aggressive behavior, smoking, and concurrent sexual partnering. The findings suggest that the magnitude and direction of peer influence depend on predisposition, gender, and the nature of the behavior. Peer effects on individuals predisposed toward a given behavior tend to be larger than peer effects on individuals without such a predisposition. We find that the influence of roommates on aggressive behavior is more pronounced among male students than among female students; roommate effects on smoking are negative among female students and male students who did not smoke before college. For concurrent sexual partnering, a highly private behavior, we find no evidence of peer effects.
识别偶然的同伴影响对社会科学家来说是一个长期存在的挑战。我们利用一项随机分配大学室友的自然实验数据(N = 2,059),消除了朋友选择的威胁,研究同伴对攻击性行为、吸烟和同时进行性伴侣关系的影响。研究结果表明,同伴影响的程度和方向取决于倾向、性别和行为的性质。同伴对倾向于某种特定行为的个体的影响往往大于对没有这种倾向的个体的影响。我们发现,室友对攻击性行为的影响在男学生中比在女学生中更明显;室友对吸烟的影响在女学生和大学前不吸烟的男学生中是负面的。对于同时进行性伴侣关系这种高度私密的行为,我们没有发现同伴影响的证据。