The Role of Multilayered Peer Groups in Adolescent Depression: A Distributional Approach

Citation

Lee, Dohoon & Lee, Byungkyu (2020). The Role of Multilayered Peer Groups in Adolescent Depression: A Distributional Approach. American Journal of Sociology. vol. 125 (6) pp. 1513-1558

Abstract

Much literature on peer influence has relied on central tendency–based approaches to examine the role of peer groups. This article develops a distributional framework that (1) differentiates between the influence of depressive peers and that of a majority group of nondepressive peers; and (2) considers the multilayered nature of peer environments. The authors investigate which segments of the distribution of peer depressive symptoms drive peer effects on adolescent depression across different layers of peer groups. Results from the Add Health data show that, for institutionally imposed peer groups, exposure to depressive peers significantly increases adolescents’ depressive symptoms. For self-selected peer groups, the central tendency of peer depression largely captures its impact on adolescent depression. High parent-child attachment buffers the deleterious consequence of exposure to depressive grademates. The implications of these findings are discussed for research and policy regarding peer effects on adolescent well-being.

URL

https://doi.org/10.1086/709425

Keyword(s)

INTERNALIZING SYMPTOMS

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

American Journal of Sociology

Author(s)

Lee, Dohoon
Lee, Byungkyu

Year Published

2020

Volume Number

125

Issue Number

6

Pages

1513-1558

DOI

10.1086/709425

Reference ID

6195