Our buddies, ourselves: The role of sexual homophily in adolescent friendship networks

Citation

Trinh, Sarah L.; Lee, Jaemin; Halpern, Carolyn T.; & Moody, James (2019). Our buddies, ourselves: The role of sexual homophily in adolescent friendship networks. Child Development. vol. 90 (1) pp. 132-147

Abstract

The present study tests the assumption that peers wield sufficient influence to induce sexual homophily (i.e., similarities in sexual experiences). Because girls face greater stigma for their sexual experiences than do boys, sexual homophily may be greater in girls' friendship networks than in boys'. Stochastic actor‐based models were used to analyze network data (n = 2,566; ages 14–18) from two high schools in the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health. Sexual homophily was present in friendship networks. Girls and boys were equally susceptible to their friends' influence, but the former exhibited a stronger preference for befriending same sexual debut status peers than the latter. The findings suggest that adolescents—particularly girls—“curate” their networks to minimize peer ostracism.

URL

http://doi.org/10.1111/cdev.13052

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Child Development

Author(s)

Trinh, Sarah L.
Lee, Jaemin
Halpern, Carolyn T.
Moody, James

Year Published

2019

Volume Number

90

Issue Number

1

Pages

132-147

Edition

March 25, 2018

DOI

10.1111/cdev.13052

Reference ID

7556