Lecture 10 Love and sex
Part 1 &2 – Adolescent romance
Not only being in a romantic relationship, but also:
Daydreaming about the person in front of you in class with whom you have never spoken
Claims to have a boyfriend, but denied by the boy
Talk on phone everyday (or texting), but never seen in public together for fear of being ridiculed
Going together but only spend time together with other members of their crowd
Going steady for 3 years (the “real” thing)
Fantasies to interactions to relationships = romantic experiences
Romance
Love or romance is central theme in 68% of pop music
One of top 5 script themes for adolescent characters on TV
Adolescent girls attribute 34% of their strong emotions to real or fantasized heterosexual relationships
Adolescent boys 25%
Substantially higher than any other topic
Organizing principles of peer culture
Focal topic of conversation in leisure time
Romantic relationship
Romantic Relationship = mutually acknowledged ongoing voluntary interactions.
Compared to other peer relationships, romantic ones typically have a distinctive intensity, commonly marked by expressions of affection and current or anticipated sexual behavior.
Applies to same-gender, as well as mixed-gender, relationships.
Romantic experiences
Refers to activities and processes that include romantic relationships and also behavioral, cognitive, and emotional phenomena that do not involve direct experiences with a romantic partner.
Includes:
fantasies and one-sided attractions (“crushes”),
interactions with potential romantic partners (including flirting) and
Brief, nonromantic sexual encounters (e.g., “hooking up,” or casual involvement in activities usually thought to take place with romantic partners, from “making out” to intercourse)
Adolescent romance
Romantic relationships support the development of interpersonal skills and promote a sense of identity.
Experiment with romantic relations
may facilitate healthy relations in adulthood.
Opportunities to gain skills in the expression and regulation of emotions, empathy and intimacy.
Developmental progression of romantic and sexual interest and behavior
8-11 (Pre and early puberty) adrenarche
First crush
Sexual attraction
Sexual arousal
More awareness of social rules
12-17 Mid and late puberty
Gender intensification
Gender binary
conformity increases and then subsides
Romantic relationships
Duration longer
More intense
Some life-long partners
Sexual Experiences increase
Not until adolescence do truly intimate relationships first emerge
Characteristics of true intimacy:
Openness, honesty, self-disclosure, and trust
Intimacy becomes an important concern due to changes of
Puberty
Cognitive changes
Social changes
What is intimacy?
Intimacy involves a relationship where two or more people reveal personal thoughts and information about each other.
Comfortable revealing themselves in an intimate relationship
feel comfort and support from the other person
Physical closeness usually comes along with intimacy.
hugging and touching
How does intimacy develop in adolescent friendships?
Intimate friendships are defined as "the ability to share one's thoughts and feelings with a friend“ (Berndt & Williams, 1990, p. 278).
Intimate friendships become more common in adolescence
feel it is safer to reveal things to their friends.
Adolescents seek approval from adults,
therefore, less inclined to reveal things
fear being looked upon as childish
Adolescents look for intimate relationships with other adolescents
feel that others their own age are going through similar experiences
and will be able to relate (Cole & Cole, 1993)
How does intimacy develop in romantic relationships?
Intimacy in a romantic relationship differs from a friendship because of the added sexual interest
Emotional intimacy increases with age and experience with relationships, first romantic relationships have very little intimacy
Adolescents learn how to express and deal with their sexual identities by discussions with their friends
Dating
What is a date?
A social engagement between young people with no commitment beyond the expectation that it is fun for both.
Factors related to dating frequency
Liked by peers
Large number of close other-sex friends > larger network of other-sex members>increased likelihood of romantic relations
Age (older more)
Dating relationships
Serve many purposes, besides developing intimacy
Establishing emotional and behavioral autonomy from parents
Furthering development of gender identity
Learning about oneself as a romantic partner (self concept)
Establishing/maintaining status and popularity in peer group
Prevalence
Romantic relationships are very common, in the past 18 months
25% of 12-year-olds reported having one
50% of 15-year-olds
70% of 18-year-olds, 80% ever
Not trivial
Early adolescence (25% daters)
80% thought of themselves as a couple
Of these, 67% had told each other they loved each other (Carver et al., 2003)
Late adolescence (80% daters)
By age 18, average length of relationship 9.5 months
But can dating too young lead to problems? Is it age or the peer group?
Norms for dating:
Descriptive norms: what others do
Injunctive norms: what others approve of/desire
Downside of early adolescent romantic relationships
Links to depression
Negative association to academics
Risk for aggression
Attraction to aggressive peers increases in middle school
Early adolescent romantic rel = higher risk of partner violence
Bullies date earlier
Age or peer group?
Examined how peer norms condition the effect of romantic involvement on adolescents’ internalizing and externalizing problem behaviors
Higher levels of problem behaviors and higher levels of depression when they started dating
Descriptive norms on dating experience of friendship group (67%) and classmates (78%)
Externalizing problems = arguing with teacher, punished in class, late for school, using alcohol, cigarettes, drugs
Internalizing problems = I feel worried, depressed, worthless.
Externalizing problems
For those adolescents who started a relationship, they showed a significant increase in externalizing problems
Dating norms of friends: main effect of dating norms of friends (by boys). Dating norms of class and when start to date. These effects aren't for girls.
Results boys
Dating starters engaged in more ext prob at time 2
Boys engaged in more ext prob at time 2 the higher the friendship norm for dating was
Class norms conditioned link between dating and externalizing problems
Internalizing problems
Started dating > internalizing problems for girls
Class norms conditioned link between dating and internalizing problems
Early dating relative to the norms of class > internalizing problems
Conclusion
The impact of dating may depend on context
Progression of social, romantic and sexual events during adolescence
Have you done this behavior?
Rankorder (chronologically)
Uncommitted dating and hooking up
Characterized by casual sex, though term includes many other types of sexual encounters
28% of urban secondary students in any form of hook up in 2009 (associated with drug use, truancy and school suspensions)
Hook-ups involving sexual intercourse
62% between friends
23% acquaintances
What about the effects of age?
Casual sex partners by age: levels off by 22
Predictors of casual sex
Perceptions of peers sexual activity (weaker for females) (descriptive norms)
Alcohol use
Number of prior dating partners
Enrollment in higher education (-), but changes as people get older
Not significant
peers attitudes (injunctive norms)
Drug use to get high
Parental relationship quality
Full time employment
Significance of romantic experiences
Benefits
Intimacy
Identity
Relatedness
Autonomy
Social competence
Positive self esteem
Risks
Teen pregnancy
STDs
Sexual victimization
25% victims of dating violence or aggression
Break ups
Depression
Multiple victim killings
Suicide
Part 3 – theoretical perspectives
Biosocial perspectives (evolution)
Emphasize the interactions between biological changes and the (social) context
Primary theory: evolutionary psychology.
changes in social relationships that enhance reproductive fitness should co-occur with attaining reproductive capability.
Reproductive fitness = number of copies of one’s genes passed on to future generations
Developmental Evolutionary Attachment Model
Reproductive strategies and pubertal development
Evolved to maximize inclusive fitness
Inclusive fitness – number of copies of one’s genes passed on through one’s offspring, surviving collateral kin, or unrelated others
Parenting is one means of increasing fitness
Reproductive strategies
Quantitative or qualitative
Quantitative strategy
Limited investment of time, energy, resources “'bad parenting”
Many offspring
High mating effort
Qualitative strategy
Time, energy, resources, “good parenting”
Few offspring
High parenting effort
Developmental evolutionary attachment model
See slide
Interpersonal perspectives
Interpersonal perspectives emphasize the nature and processes of changes in adolescents' social relationships and the contribution of these changes to individual development.
In interdependence models, joint patterns of actions, cognitions, and emotions between two individuals are the primary locus of interpersonal influences .
Attachment theory primary theory (but psychoanalytic and other theories take an interpersonal approach
Attachment theory
A history of sensitive, responsive interactions and strong emotional bonds with caregivers in childhood facilitates adaptation to the transitions of adolescence.
Mature romantic attachments require the cognitive and emotional maturity to integrate attachment, caregiving, and sexual/reproductive components.
the process begins with a redistribution of attachment-related functions (for example, a desire for proximity, relying on the other person for unconditional acceptance) to friends and boyfriends or girlfriends.
Hierarchical model of relational views
Individuals form representations of
Close relationships in general
Types of close relationships (parents, friends, romantic partners)
Particular relationships
Relational views
Includes all behavioral systems (not just internal model of attachment)
Attachment (central to views of parent-child relation until early adulthood)
Caregiving (friendship, parent-child)
Sexual/reproduction (romantic relation)
Affiliation (closeness, central in friendship)
Mature adult romantic relationships integrate all 4
Includes both
working models (internally, partially nonconscious representations) and
relational styles (overt, conscious representations)
Adult Romantic Attachment Styles and Beh. Systems
Secure base (attachment behaviors)
Secure – cope with stress by seeking social support
Anxious-avoidant – withdraw with stress
Anxious-ambivalent (preoccupied) – preoccupied with partner’s responsiveness
Caregiving
Secure – show more emotional support, reassurance & concern
Anxious-avoidant – show less
Anxious-ambivalent (preoccupied) – overinvolvement, insensitive
Sexuality
Anxious-avoidant – uncommitted sexual relations
Affiliation
Secures – trust, friendship, enjoyment, mutuality
Avoidant – uninvested, distant, non-disclosing
Preoccupied – over-controlling, overly-disclosing, and self-focused
Uses same categorical systems as int. work models of attachment but cover all behavioral systems across all levels
Secure
Anxious-avoidant (dismissing)
Anxious-ambivalent (preoccupied)
Disorganized/unresolved (fearful)
Levels are interdependent
Different relationships often but not necessarily concordant
Parent-child relationship
Parent-child relational views exert influence on dev. of relational views
From attachment theory: similarity in functions as well as persistence of attachment representations across the lifespan
Secure-insecure attachment relationship with parents significantly related to romantic relations in university students
Males related > than females
In adolescence – attachment works via its effects on close relationships in general views about the self with others
Peer relations
Intimacy with close friends = empathy with romantic partner (Connolly & Goldber, 1999)
Quality in friendships = later quality in adolescent RR (Connolly et al 2000)
Hostile talk about women between male peers = aggression toward partner at age 21 (Capaldi, Dishion, Stoolmiller & Yoerger, 2001)
Peer relationships
Importance for initiation romantic relations
Status
Help with finding partner
For sex. minority youth – passionate, same-sex friendships (intense but not sexual) may assist in sexual identity)
Share overt features
Affiliative features
Egalitarian interactions
Thus: both parents and peers are important
Other: Psychoanalytic/psychosocial stage theories
Sullivan (psychoanalytic)
Emphasized the social aspects of growth.
Psychological development can be best understood in interpersonal terms.
Theory focuses on transformations in relationships with others.
Seven stages across life, three stages of interpersonal needs over the course of adolescence.
Need for intimacy precedes development of romantic or sexual relationships.
Capacity for intimacy first develops in same-sex relationships.
Quality of same-sex friendships is predictive of quality of their later romantic relationships (reverse is not true).
Challenge during adolescence is to make the transition between nonsexual, intimate same-sex friendships to sexual, intimate other-sex friendships of late adolescence.
Developmental progression of needs
Infancy (0-1 yr): Need for contact and tenderness
Child (1-4 yrs) seeks adults for participation in play
Juvenile (4-8): Need for peers and peer acceptance (cooperation, competition and compromise)
Preadolescence (8-13/puberty)
increase need for intimacy (with peers) – one close friend
Adolescence (puberty/13 – 16)
Need for sexual contact/expression and intimacy with opposite-sex peer; self worth synonymous with sexual attractiveness and acceptance by opposite sex peers Need for integration in adult society
Late Adolescence / Young Adulthood
Need for friendship and sexual expression combine to focus on finding a long term relationship
Adulthood
Establishes a stable, long term relationship and a consistent pattern of viewing the world
Emphasized the social aspects of psychological growth
Changes in the “targets” of intimacy
Sullivan hypothesized that
Intimacy with peers replaces intimacy with parents
Intimacy with peers of the opposite sex replaces intimacy with same-sex friends (Heterosexual perspective)
Actually new targets of intimacy are added to old ones
Erikson (psychoanalytic) 6th crisis: intimacy vs. Isolation
Identity Crisis
adolescents' most important task is identity vs. role confusion.
identity crisis should be resolved before they can successfully conquer the next stage of development which is intimacy vs. isolation.
Intimacy Vs Isolation: Normally confronted in Young adulthood
Close heterosexual rel. within which procreation could be accomplished
Problems: excludes possibility of intimacy in: homosexual relations, platonic friendships, childless marriages
Intimacy is a threat to identity: lose tenuous self through closeness with another, if unsure of self, cannot be intimate
Isolation: ind. does not dev. a capacity for sharing or caring about others. Relationships will be superficial, competitive, antagonistic or all three
Problems- consequences cannot be identified from cause
Brown (psychosocial)
Developmental Model of Adolescent Love
Initiation Phase - (Early Ad) tentative, explorations (days, weeks)
Status Phase - first more serious relations, but linked to peer status (days, weeks)
Friends are arbitrators
Affection Phase – express deeper feelings and more physical intimacy (months)
Friends – eyes, arbitrators, support
Bonding Phase – (EA) more enduring and serious, discuss possibility of long term commitment
Friends – minor but support
Ecological theories
Ecological perspectives emphasize the social and cultural contexts that encourage or constrain close relationships and endow them with meaning and significance.
Ecological features include:
historical, social, economic, political, geographical, cultural, and institutional and community conditions and characteristics that shape proximal experiences.
The most frequently studied contexts of adolescent romantic relationships are networks of families and peers, ethnic/cultural contexts, religious institutions, and the mass media
Bioecological model
Bronfenbrenner: person in middle of circle, individual characteristics that are important (embedded in microsystem), ecosystem (societal institutions), mesosystem (interconnection between microsystem and larger system). Interconnections are very important as well.
Biopsychosocial
Herdt
Multi-systemic perspective
All these theories suggest that development does not take place in a vacuum, but evolve within various environmental contexts, both individual and social.
Sternberg’s Triarchic Theory (nondevelopmental)
Theory of love. What is love and how do we define it?
What attracts us to others?
Being around?
Birds of a feather?
Attractiveness?
Attitudes, behavior, char, clothes, IQ, personality, lifestyle (Consensual validation)
More likely to gain control of similar others. Sort of consensual validation
Faces of love (4 forms)
Altruism – unselfish interest in helping someone
Friendship – form of a close relationship that involves enjoyment, acceptance, trust, respect, mutual assistance, confiding, understanding and spontaneity
(differs from lovers with respect to fascination, exclusiveness, & stability)
Romantic or Passionate love – strong sexual and infatuation components, often predominant in the early part of a love relationship
“in love”
Romantic love is the main reason to get married
Would you get married if not in love:
1967: No 65% males and 20% females
1984: No 85% males and 80% females
More than 50% of men and women today say that NOT being in love is sufficient reason to dissolve a marriage
Companionate or affectionate love – have other person near, and deep caring affection for that person (Sternberg: intimacy and commitment)
Triangular love scale. Love consists of three elements: passion, intimacy, commitment.
Problems with research on romantic relationships
Lack of sufficient theory
Attachment theory leading theory
Biosocial models & ecological perspectives – very specific
No comprehensive Model
Difficult to research
Operational definitions
Self definitions, Minimum length
Representative Samples (schools, parents, internet)
Short duration and instability
Part 4 – love meets technology
What is sexting?
Sexting is: sending, receiving, or forwarding sexually explicit messages, photographs, or videos, primarily between mobile phones, of oneself to others.
Research
Purpose (slide): how is sexting linked with adolescent relationship perceptions?
Methods
Differences in relationship quality as a function of sexting
Sexting is associated with higher levels of aggression in relationships with respect adults.
Predictors of sexting: relationship length, prior sex and verbal conflict
What are the implications of these results?
Should adolescents sext?
What will they achieve by sexting?
Why do adolescents sext?
Does sexting improve relationship satisfaction?
Part 5 – sex in the Netherlands
Sexual development
Series of different behaviors
kiss on the mouth
excitement and masturbation
French kiss
Feel and caress above clothes
Feel and caress under clothes
Manual sex
Intercourse and oral sex
Anal sex (minority)
Often in this order
It takes approximately 4 years (on average)
Sex before age 25
Study in the Netherlands
Increase in participants
Results
Youth begin to have sex at a slightly later age (18 v 17 50%)
Use of the pill has decreased (from 74% to 64%) and is replaced by IUD (Intrauterine device Spiraaltje) 5% to 11%)
40% of youth do not use a condom when having a one-night-stand
75% do not use a condom regularly when having casual sex
Percent of youth who have experienced sexual coercion has decreased.
Sexting has drastically increased. (1/8 send, 1/4 males received, 1/5 girls received)
Graph
Descriptive norm
Gender: boys are reporting masturbating and being involved with French kissing earlier, later age for anal sex
Group differences
Educational level: very little difference across and within educational levels
University track students (VWO) begin later
Contraception: younger age > more likely to use contraception
European context: Dutch youth are late comparing other European adolescents
Factors associated with early sex among 12–16-year-olds
Univariate Predictors
Reached puberty
School information
Social media use
Porno
Experienced bullying
Emotional neglect/abuse at home
Self-esteem (ns)
Mental health
Sexual victimization
Multivariate
Puberty +
Social media use +
Self esteem +
Religion plays a significant role in attitudes about sex.
Sexual coercion
Experiencing victimization makes young people vulnerable again
Many do not discuss the issue
Conclusions
Dutch youth are all sexually active
Majority shows a normal sexual development, in a gradual order
Already before the sexual career (puberty) youth are confronted with sex
Information/education, and talking about sex with children, before the start of their sexual career, is very important.
Week of the spring jitters (Week van de Lentekriebels)
March 15-19, 2021 Theme: “Sexual and Gender Diversity”
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Adolescence Development - Lectures - Universiteit Utrecht
- Adolescent Development - Universiteit Utrecht
- Physical development, adolescent development- Universiteit Utrecht
- Adolescent cognitive development - Universiteit Utrecht
- Morality - Universiteit Utrecht
- Self and Identity - Universiteit Utrecht
- Family relations - Universiteit Utrecht
- Peers - Universiteit Utrecht
- Adolescents in school - Universiteit Utrecht
- Media use - Universiteit Utrecht
- Love and sex - Universiteit Utrecht
- Alcohol use and delinquency - Universiteit Utrecht
- Depression, self-harm and suicide - Universiteit Utrecht
- Suicide and related problems in adolescence - Universiteit Utrecht
- The end of adolescence - Universiteit Utrecht
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Adolescence Development - Lectures - Universiteit Utrecht
Notes of the course 'Adolescence Development' 2020-2021
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