Deutsch Arielle R, Steinley Douglas, Sher Kenneth J, Slutske Wendy S
Sanford Research, Sioux Falls, South Dakota.
Department of Psychological Sciences, University of Missouri-Columbia, Columbia, Missouri.
J Stud Alcohol Drugs. 2017 Sep;78(5):754-762. doi: 10.15288/jsad.2017.78.754.
The findings of previous research that examined relationships between popularity and alcohol use in adolescents have been mixed, and few hypotheses have proposed mechanisms for this relationship. The current study expands on previous literature (a) by examining a possible mechanism that can explain the relation between popularity and alcohol use (home access to alcohol) and (b) by using another sociometric measure ("betweenness"), beyond popularity, that may relate more to home alcohol access.
Using network-level data from adolescents in 9th-11th grades in eight schools within two in-home waves of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health), we examined two sociometric measures of social status: popularity (number of schoolmates who nominated participants as a friend) and betweenness (level of ties participants have to multiple social subgroups within a network).
Betweenness, but not popularity, related to later alcohol use. Having home access to alcohol positively related to later alcohol use, and having friends with home access to alcohol negatively related to later alcohol use. Alcohol access was also related to later sociometric status. Friends' alcohol access negatively related to later betweenness, and personal alcohol access moderated other pathways predicting betweenness.
Betweenness appears to play a unique role in the association between social status and alcohol use in adolescent social networks. This is potentially tied to specific ways in which adolescents may be able to access alcohol (through home or through friends with access at home). More research is necessary to examine the ways in which multiple sociometric statuses relate to the contexts in which adolescents access and use alcohol.
以往关于青少年受欢迎程度与饮酒之间关系的研究结果不一,且很少有假设提出这种关系的机制。本研究在前人文献的基础上进行拓展,(a)通过研究一种可能解释受欢迎程度与饮酒之间关系的机制(家中可获得酒精饮料),以及(b)使用另一种社会计量学指标(“中间中心性”),该指标除了受欢迎程度外,可能与家中酒精饮料的可获得性更相关。
利用全国青少年健康纵向研究(Add Health)两轮家庭内调查中八所学校9至11年级青少年的网络层面数据,我们考察了两种社会地位的社会计量学指标:受欢迎程度(将参与者提名为朋友的同学数量)和中间中心性(参与者与网络内多个社会子群体的联系程度)。
中间中心性而非受欢迎程度与后期饮酒有关。家中可获得酒精饮料与后期饮酒呈正相关,而有家中可获得酒精饮料的朋友与后期饮酒呈负相关。酒精饮料的可获得性也与后期的社会计量学地位有关。朋友的酒精饮料可获得性与后期的中间中心性呈负相关,个人酒精饮料可获得性调节了预测中间中心性的其他路径。
中间中心性似乎在青少年社交网络中社会地位与饮酒之间的关联中发挥着独特作用。这可能与青少年获取酒精饮料的特定方式(通过家中或家中有酒精饮料的朋友)有关。有必要进行更多研究,以考察多种社会计量学地位与青少年获取和使用酒精饮料的背景之间的关系。