Kandel D B
Adv Alcohol Subst Abuse. 1985 Spring-Summer;4(3-4):139-63. doi: 10.1300/J251v04n03_07.
Data from longitudinal studies of adolescents carried out over the last ten years are reviewed to provide an integrated and dynamic perspective on the nature of friendships and processes of peer influence in adolescent drug involvement, within a general developmental perspective. Four interrelated questions are examined: What individual attributes are especially important in the formation of friendships among adolescents? Which of two processes, selection or socialization, account for the similarity in values and behaviors observed in ongoing friendship dyads, and how important is similarity in friendship formation and dissolution? What is the nature of friends' influence as compared to parents', and in which domains of adolescent's life do these influences exert themselves? What mechanisms, role modeling or social learning, underlie processes of interpersonal influences? Relational dyadic and triadic samples of adolescents matched to a parent and/or a best friend and observed at one point in time as well as over time provide important and relatively rare sources of data on processes of interpersonal influence. Sociodemographic characteristics are the strongest determinants of friendship formation, with participation in illicit drugs following next in importance. Both selection (assortative pairing) and socialization contribute to observed similarity in friendship pairs. Adolescents coordinate their choice of friends and their values and behaviors, in particular the use of marijuana, so as to maximize congruency in the friendship dyad. If there is a state of unbalance such that the friend's attitude or behavior is inconsistent with the adolescent's, the adolescent will either break off the friendship and seek another friend or will keep the friend and modify his or her own behavior. Both parents and peers can have strong influences on adolescents, depending upon the arena of influence. Parents are especially important for future life plans, while peers are most important for involvement in illicit drug use. However, for drug use itself, there are different patterns of influence depending upon the stage of drug involvement. Peers are especially important for initiation into marijuana use, while parental factors gain in importance in the transition from marijuana use to the use of other illicit drugs. Interpersonal influences of peers on ongoing marijuana and alcohol use result from modeling and imitation more than from social reinforcement and the transmission of values.
回顾过去十年对青少年进行的纵向研究数据,以便在一般发展视角下,就青少年吸毒过程中友谊的本质和同伴影响过程提供一个综合且动态的观点。研究了四个相互关联的问题:在青少年友谊形成过程中,哪些个体属性特别重要?选择或社会化这两个过程中,哪一个能解释在持续的友谊二元组中观察到的价值观和行为的相似性,以及相似性在友谊形成和解体中有多重要?与父母相比,朋友的影响本质是什么,这些影响在青少年生活的哪些领域发挥作用?人际影响过程背后的机制是榜样作用还是社会学习?与父母和/或最好的朋友匹配的青少年的关系二元组和三元组样本,在某一时刻以及随时间进行观察,提供了关于人际影响过程的重要且相对稀缺的数据来源。社会人口学特征是友谊形成的最强决定因素,参与非法药物使用的重要性次之。选择(选择性配对)和社会化都有助于解释友谊对中观察到的相似性。青少年会协调他们对朋友的选择以及他们的价值观和行为,特别是大麻的使用,以便在友谊二元组中最大化一致性。如果存在不平衡状态,即朋友的态度或行为与青少年的不一致,青少年要么断绝友谊并寻找另一个朋友,要么保留朋友并改变自己的行为。父母和同伴都能对青少年产生强大影响,这取决于影响领域。父母对于未来生活规划尤为重要,而同伴对于参与非法药物使用最为重要。然而,对于吸毒本身,根据吸毒阶段不同存在不同的影响模式。同伴对于开始使用大麻尤为重要,而在从使用大麻过渡到使用其他非法药物时,父母因素的重要性增加。同伴对持续使用大麻和酒精的人际影响更多源于模仿,而非社会强化和价值观的传递。