University of Tennessee, Center for Behavioral Health Research, 213 Henson Hall, Knoxville, TN 37996-3332, USA.
Addict Behav. 2019 Aug;95:28-34. doi: 10.1016/j.addbeh.2019.02.021. Epub 2019 Feb 23.
Understanding the complex influence of peers on young adult substance use is an important component of intervention research and is challenging methodologically. The false consensus theory suggests that individuals falsely attribute their own substance use behaviors onto others, producing biased data.
We tested this theory with 39 young adults who had a cannabis use disorder and a mean age of 20. Participants (egos) recruited three of their close friends (alters). Egos reported their past 30-day cannabis and alcohol use and their perceptions of alters' use. Alters also reported their actual past 30-day cannabis and alcohol use.
Results demonstrated that egos were very accurate in their perceptions of the frequency of alters' cannabis (ρ = 0.82, p < 0.001) and alcohol (ρ = 0.74, p < 0.001) use. Linear regression models predicted alters' actual cannabis and alcohol use based on egos' perceptions of alters' use, controlling for egos' own substance use. Egos' perceptions of alters' cannabis use strongly predicted alters' actual use (β = 0.80, p < 0.001, adj-R = 0.67), and egos' perceptions of alters' alcohol use also predicted alters' actual use (β = 0.66, p < 0.001, adj-R = 0.62). Egos' own substance use did not predict alters' use in either model.
Results provide evidence that the false consensus theory may be limited when applied to young adults with cannabis use disorder within a close-friend research framework. The results support the hypothesis that young adults are very accurate in their perceptions of the frequency of close friends' substance use and that these perceptions are independent of egos' own use. These findings support the continued use of ego-centric reported close peer substance use for understanding peer effects.
理解同伴对年轻成年人物质使用的复杂影响是干预研究的一个重要组成部分,在方法学上具有挑战性。虚假共识理论表明,个体错误地将自己的物质使用行为归因于他人,从而产生有偏差的数据。
我们用 39 名患有大麻使用障碍且平均年龄为 20 岁的年轻人来检验这一理论。参与者(自我)招募了他们的三个亲密朋友(他人)。自我报告了他们过去 30 天的大麻和酒精使用情况,以及他们对他人使用的看法。他人还报告了他们过去 30 天的实际大麻和酒精使用情况。
结果表明,自我对他人大麻使用频率的感知非常准确(ρ=0.82,p<0.001)和酒精(ρ=0.74,p<0.001)。线性回归模型根据自我对他人使用的感知预测了他人的实际大麻和酒精使用情况,控制了自我的物质使用情况。自我对他人大麻使用的感知强烈预测了他人的实际使用(β=0.80,p<0.001,调整后的 R²=0.67),自我对他人酒精使用的感知也预测了他人的实际使用(β=0.66,p<0.001,调整后的 R²=0.62)。自我的物质使用情况在两个模型中都不能预测他人的使用情况。
结果提供了证据表明,当应用于具有大麻使用障碍的年轻成年人的亲密朋友研究框架中时,虚假共识理论可能是有限的。结果支持了这样的假设,即年轻人对亲密朋友物质使用频率的感知非常准确,并且这些感知独立于自我的使用。这些发现支持继续使用以自我为中心的报告的亲密同伴物质使用来理解同伴效应。