Human Development and Family Studies, College of Education, University of Nevada, Reno, NV, USA.
Department of Human Development and Family Studies, Utah State University, Logan, UT, USA.
Dev Psychopathol. 2019 Dec;31(5):1619-1631. doi: 10.1017/S0954579419001020.
Adolescents' peer networks provide an important context that can contribute to increases in antisocial behavior. By a process called deviancy training, peers can both model and reinforce these behaviors, thereby conveying group norms about the acceptability of such behaviors. This research examined the relationship between the proportion of adolescents' peers who exchanged antisocial text messages and externalizing behaviors during high school. In Study 1, parent-, teacher-, and self-reports of rule-breaking and aggression were collected for a sample of adolescents (n = 167, 80 girls; 22.2% Black, 51.5% Caucasian, 18.7% Hispanic) during the summers before and after 9th grade. Total text frequency, frequency of antisocial texts, and the proportion of the peer network who exchanged antisocial messages were examined as predictors of antisocial behavior. The proportion of peers who exchanged antisocial texts significantly predicted rule-breaking, but not aggression. Study 2 examined the direction of the relationship documented in Study 1 more thoroughly. Externalizing behaviors at 9th, 10th, and 11th grade were evaluated as predictors of the proportion of the peer network that exchanged texts about antisocial topics (n = 205, 98 girls; 22.4% Black, 53.7% Caucasian, 16.9% Hispanic). Externalizing behaviors predicted the proportion of adolescents' peer network that exchanged antisocial texts in each of the subsequent years, but this proportion of the peer network exchanging antisocial communication did not predict subsequent externalizing behaviors. The findings suggest that the extent to which antisocial communication permeates the peer group is a selection effect.
青少年的同伴网络为反社会行为的增加提供了一个重要的背景。通过一种称为偏差训练的过程,同伴可以既模仿又强化这些行为,从而传达关于此类行为可接受性的群体规范。这项研究考察了青少年同伴中交换反社会短信的比例与高中期间的外化行为之间的关系。在研究 1 中,在 9 年级前后的暑假期间,对一个青少年样本(n=167,80 名女生;22.2%黑人,51.5%白种人,18.7%西班牙裔)进行了违反规则和攻击行为的父母、教师和自我报告。总短信频率、反社会短信频率和交换反社会信息的同伴网络比例被视为反社会行为的预测指标。交换反社会短信的同伴比例显著预测了违规行为,但不预测攻击行为。研究 2 更深入地研究了研究 1 中记录的关系的方向。9 年级、10 年级和 11 年级的外化行为被评估为预测交换关于反社会主题的短信的同伴网络比例(n=205,98 名女生;22.4%黑人,53.7%白种人,16.9%西班牙裔)的指标。外化行为预测了同伴网络中在随后的每一年交换反社会短信的青少年比例,但同伴网络中交换反社会交流的比例并没有预测随后的外化行为。研究结果表明,反社会交流渗透到同伴群体的程度是一种选择效应。