A Dynamic Model of Adolescent Friendship Networks, Parental Influences, and Smoking

Peer and parental influences are critical socializing forces shaping adolescent development, including the co-evolving processes of friendship tie choice and adolescent smoking. This study examines aspects of adolescent friendship networks and dimensions of parental influences shaping friendship tie...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of youth and adolescence 2015-09, Vol.44 (9), p.1767-1786
Hauptverfasser: Lakon, Cynthia M., Wang, Cheng, Butts, Carter T., Jose, Rupa, Timberlake, David S., Hipp, John R.
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container_end_page 1786
container_issue 9
container_start_page 1767
container_title Journal of youth and adolescence
container_volume 44
creator Lakon, Cynthia M.
Wang, Cheng
Butts, Carter T.
Jose, Rupa
Timberlake, David S.
Hipp, John R.
description Peer and parental influences are critical socializing forces shaping adolescent development, including the co-evolving processes of friendship tie choice and adolescent smoking. This study examines aspects of adolescent friendship networks and dimensions of parental influences shaping friendship tie choice and smoking, including parental support, parental monitoring, and the parental home smoking environment using a Stochastic Actor-Based model. With data from three waves of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health of youth in grades 7 through 12, including the In-School Survey, the first wave of the In-Home survey occurring 6 months later, and the second wave of the In-Home survey, occurring one year later, this study utilizes two samples based on the social network data collected in the longitudinal saturated sample of sixteen schools. One consists of twelve small schools (n = 1,284, 50.93 % female), and the other of one large school (n = 976, 48.46 % female). The findings indicated that reciprocity, choosing a friend of a friend as a friend, and smoking similarity increased friendship tie choice behavior, as did parental support. Parental monitoring interacted with choosing friends who smoke in affecting friendship tie choice, as at higher levels of parental monitoring, youth chose fewer friends that smoked. A parental home smoking context conducive to smoking decreased the number of friends adolescents chose. Peer influence and a parental home smoking environment conducive to smoking increased smoking, while parental monitoring decreased it in the large school. Overall, peer and parental factors affected the coevolution of friendship tie choice and smoking, directly and multiplicatively.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s10964-014-0187-7
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subjects Adolescent
Adolescent Behavior - psychology
Adolescents
Behavioral Science and Psychology
Child and School Psychology
Child development
Children & youth
Clinical Psychology
Control theory
Drug use
Empirical Research
Female
Friends - psychology
Friendship
Health behavior
Health Psychology
History of Psychology
Humans
Law and Psychology
Longitudinal Studies
Male
Models, Psychological
Nominations
Parent Role
Parent-Child Relations
Parenting - psychology
Parents & parenting
Peer Group
Psychology
Smoking
Smoking - psychology
Social networks
Social Support
Socialization
Sociology
Stochastic models
Teenagers
title A Dynamic Model of Adolescent Friendship Networks, Parental Influences, and Smoking
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