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Journal Article

Citation

DeLay D, Burk WJ, Laursen B. Int. J. Behav. Devel. 2022; 46(3): 208-221.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/01650254221084102

PMID

35645435

PMCID

PMC9139630

Abstract

Higher accepted friends are known to influence the alcohol misuse of lower accepted friends, but not the reverse. The present study was designed to address the origins of this influence: Are higher accepted friends particularly influential or are lower accepted friends particularly susceptible to influence? To address this question, we introduce an innovative application of longitudinal social network techniques (RSIENA) designed to distinguish being influential from being susceptible to influence. The results revealed that influence was a product of heightened susceptibility among low accepted adolescents, rather than heightened influence among high accepted adolescents. The findings are consistent with claims that low accepted youth fear the consequences of nonconformity and adjust their behavior to more closely resemble their affiliates.


Language: en

Keywords

alcohol misuse; adolescence; Peer influence; peer relationships; social network analysis; susceptibility to peer influence

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