A dynamic model of US adolescents’ smoking and friendship networks

Citation

Schaefer, David R.; Haas, Steven A.; & Bishop, Nicholas J. (2012). A dynamic model of US adolescents' smoking and friendship networks. American Journal of Public Health. vol. 102 (6) pp. e12-e18 , PMCID: PMC3349762

Abstract

Objectives. We investigated the associations between smoking and friend selection in the social networks of US adolescents.

Methods. We used a stochastic actor-based model to simultaneously test the effects of friendship networks on smoking and several ways that smoking can affect the friend selection process. Data are from 509 US high school students in the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, 1994–1996 (46.6% female, mean age at outset = 15.4 years).

Results. Over time, adolescents’ smoking became more similar to their friends. Smoking also affected who adolescents selected as friends; adolescents were more likely to select friends whose smoking level was similar to their own, and smoking enhanced popularity such that smokers were more likely to be named as friends than were nonsmokers, after controlling for other friend selection processes.

Conclusions. Both friend selection and peer influence are associated with smoking frequency. Interventions to reduce adolescent smoking would benefit by focusing on selection and influence mechanisms.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.2105%2FAJPH.2012.300705

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

American Journal of Public Health

Author(s)

Schaefer, David R.
Haas, Steven A.
Bishop, Nicholas J.

Year Published

2012

Volume Number

102

Issue Number

6

Pages

e12-e18

DOI

10.2105/AJPH.2012.300705

PMCID

PMC3349762

NIHMSID

NIHMS368272

Reference ID

1608