Peers - Universiteit Utrecht

Lecture 7 Peers 

Book ‘The nurture assumption’: peers play a big role in development of youth (instead of (only) the parents) 

Part 1 - Importance of peers across adolescence 

 

  • Higher in needs fulfillment when you fulfilled the lower needs (survival needs) > belongingness and love needs and esteem needs. These are psychological needs.  

  • Importance also visible in the brain: social relationships. Example: exclusion from playing a game: social pain when excluded (analogous in its neurocognitive function to physical pain).  

Peers become more central in adolescence 

  • Time spent with family decreases 

  • Time spent with peers increases 

Peers compared to parents in adolescence 

  • Differences between the two relationships 

  • Parents = vertical (parents are more powerful), peers = horizontal relationship 

  • Being equal in experiences, characteristics etc. 

  • Shift from parents to friends as main source of support and happiness 

  • Discuss with friends for romantic issues, emotional issues; 

  • Discuss with parents for career/education issues; 

  • Thus: relationships are different and friends become more important 

Peers vs friends 

  • Peers 

  • Large network of same-age peers 

  • Friends 

  • People you know, like and with whom you develop a valued, mutual relationship (broad definition) 

  • More specifically: 

  • Mutual liking 

  • Emotional closeness 

  • Loyalty 

  • Reciprocal validation of self-worth 

  • General support 

  • Time spent together 

  • Childhood vs adolescence 

  • From shared activities (childhood) to intimacy: trust, loyalty, self-disclosure > relying on each other 

  • Why? It requires a certain role-play: perspective-taking, keep their own views and other's views in mind at the same time (that's complex to do) 

  • Social competences therefore increasingly important (conflict management, perspective-taking etc.)  

  • From same-sex to mixed-sex 

  • And “friends with benefits” 

  • From dyads (2) and small groups (3-4) to cliques (5-6) or larger crowds (these are larger to contain) 

  • “Subcultures” used to form identity > understand who you are 

Selection vs influence 

  • Friends are often similar to each other 

  • Is this due to selection or influence? 

  • Research:  

  • On the one hand: due to selection. Principles of interpersonal attraction: 

  • Proximity (being close by) 

  • Homophily/similarity (in values, interests, characteristics) 

  • Adolescents: orientation toward school, leisure activity, SES, ethnicity (perhaps due to attitudes/prejudice) 

  • Reciprocity 

  • So: selection plays a role > “birds of a feather flock together” 

  • But, parents also play a role in this selection process 

  • Expressing disapproval 

  • Type of school 

  • Neighborhood 

  • Extra-curricular activities 

  • Adolescent personality & behavior 

  • Influence: you learn behavior and adopt attitudes from your social environment, especially from those people that you encounter frequently and who are important to you 

  • Friendship precedes behavior (internalizing, externalizing, lifestyle) similarity as well 

  • So: both! 

How does peer influence happen? 

  • Different processes 

  • Passive and active influence 

  • Passive influence: 

  • Asch experiment: a series of experiments that demonstrated the degree to which an individual's own opinions are influenced by those of a majority group. 

  • There was imitation and conformity: people are imitating what others do/say > social learning theory (imitate parents/peers in order to learn) 

  • Active influence: 

  • Video active influence (mean girls):  

  • Reinforcement and instigation 

  • Being persuaded 

  • Examples of compliance-gaining tactics:  

  • Suggest; assertion 

  • Compliment 

  • Promote task 

  • Invoke norm 

  • Challenge 

  • Warning 

  • Internal vs external social reinforcement 

  • External: reinforcement by others 

  • Internal: reinforcement through own mental representations of what others might think/do 

To conclude 

  • Peers, especially friends, become increasingly important in adolescence 

  • Friendships become more intimate 

  • Similarity in friendships is due to both selection and influence process 

  • Influence can be either passive or active, and social reinforcement can be internal or external 

Part 2 – group dynamics and bullying 

Fundamental human motivations in peer groups 

  • Maslow's pyramid 

  • Fundamental needs can also be fulfilled in groups 

  • In adolescence, peer groups become increasingly important 

  • Social position in group associated with psychological needs 

Relation social position and psychological needs 

  • Belonging (affection: horizontal) 

  • Provide us with a feeling of belonging in the group 

  • Monkey: affection 

  • Esteem (popularity: vertical) 

  • Extent to which the group admires you 

  • Monkey: on the rock, “alpha monkeys” the ones who are the most popular 

Group dynamics: interplay of horizontal and vertical relationships 

  • Constantly interacting with each other 

  • Example: if your friend (= horizontal) increases in status (= vertical), they also want to hang out (= horizontal) with the “cool kids” 

  • This is never stable 

Status: vertical relationship 

  • Popularity as indicator of status 

  • Popularity gives adolescents power: 

  • Popular peers determine the group norms: implicit rules about what behaviors are accepted 

  • Do popular peers receive more (visual) attention? 

  • Research: computer experiment in which adolescents have to look at a screen with pictures of their peers (popular and not popular). Gazes of the adolescents are tracked. Two measurements: first gaze preference + total gaze time 

  • Visual preference for popular peers: first and longer gazes to popular peers 

Understanding group dynamics: social network analysis 

  • Facebook: vivid social network, one big worldwide network.  

  • Classroom: how do students interact with each other?  

  • Measurement: peer nominations (“who...”) 

  • Affection: social preference 

  • Popularity 

  • Other measurements possible as well (leadership, prosocial, etc.) 

  • In-degree nominations: how often have you been selected in one of the answers? 

  • Actor 1 is well liked in the peer group 

  • Out-degree nominations 

  • Look at friendships: who are your best friends? 

  • Actor 1 at least perceives that he has many friends 

Examples of use group process: bullying 

What is bullying? 

  • Complex phenomenon  

  • Four main characteristics: 

  • Goal-directed: it doesn't happen without a reason. Goal: to achieve dominance 

  • Power imbalance: bully has more power than victim 

  • Intellectual or physical power 

  • Repetitive: it happens all over again 

  • Harmful: it isn't perceived as a joke 

Goal-directed: functional approach 

  • Bullies' goals are not sadistic, but social in nature 

  • Social dominance goals 

  • Boosts your self-esteem 

  • Without losing affection from significant others (belonging) 

  • Show behavior that others encourage them to do 

Apart from bullies and victims, who are also involved? > video 

  • Bullies 

  • Victim 

  • Bystanders/outstanders: watch the bullies but don't participate 

  • Defender 

 

  • Assistant: doesn't start bullying, but helps the bully 

  • Reinforcer: doesn't actively bully, but reinforces by (for example) laughing 

  • Defender: standing up for the victim 

  • Outsider: observe the bullying without playing an active role in it 

Understanding who bullies whom: social network analyses 

  • Measurement: peer nominations 

  • “who bullies you?” 

  • To understand what relates to bullying/victimization, this can be combined with information on... 

  • Upper left: victims. Lower left: bullies 

  • They are standing closer to each other 

  • Victims form cohesive group, bullies also form a group 

  • Also some other groups formed 

  • Friendships are based on popularity, sex, etc. 

  • With the information on social networks, you can make sense of group dynamics and of bullies and victims. 

Social networks in anti-bullying interventions 

  •  “sociograms” for teachers 

  • Especially in adolescence, when bullying is indirect and not visible to teachers 

  • Teachers can understand social dynamics in their peer groups 

  • Caution needed: confidential, lack of contextual information (specific moments of when students reported this information) 

To conclude 

  • Peer group dynamics are interplay between horizontal (affection, belonging) and vertical (status) relationships 

  • Popular peers determine the norms and receive more attention 

  • Social network analysis can be used to identify peer group processes 

  • Bullying is a strategic behavior and peer group phenomenon in which all peers play a role 

Part 3 – unsuccessful peer relationships 

Social withdrawal 

  • Active isolation vs social withdrawal 

  • Active isolation: someone is isolated by others/excluded 

  • Withdrawal: you decide to withdraw from social interactions 

  • Subtypes  

  •  

  • Anxious-withdrawn: there are two conflictive motivations at work. You want to approach others, but at the same time you are anxious of what could happen (> avoidance motivation).  

Consequences of social withdrawal 

  • Lower social skills 

  • More internalizing problems 

  • “developmental cascade model” 

  • Model describes that social withdrawal is a problem that can for example manifest in adolescence but is already developed and escalated in interaction with others in infancy.  

  • In adolescence it starts off appearing as a problem 

When peer relationships go wrong 

  • social withdrawal 

  • Peer victimization 

  • What makes someone vulnerable? 

What explains peer victimization? 

  • Bullies are strategic, want to achieve dominance. They don't want others to support the victim. 

  • Being an easy target: undefended (not supported by others) 

  • More maladjusted children (different in social behaviors, externalizing behaviors) 

  • Role of parents 

  •  

  • Parent who are rejective, low in warmth > maladjustment symptoms (socially withdrawn, depressed) > peer victimization 

  • Or other way around: peer victimization > more internalizing/externalizing symptoms at home > parents respond to this behavior (> more rejective) 

Being “different” 

  • Others will not support you 

  • Traditionally: specific characteristics predict victimization (e.g., being fat, ginger hair, braces, etc.) 

  • Modern view: it depends on the norm (in the classroom or social group) 

  • Being different from the norm: less likely to recruit support 

  • Selection: people support those who are similar to each other 

Minority youth: therefore at risk for persistent victimization in adolescence? 

  • Ethnic, sexual or gender minority 

  • Studie:   

  • Three groups: not victimized, decreasing victimization trajectory, persistent victimization trajectory 

  • LGB adolescents 3 times more likely to be in persistent than in decreasing group 

  • More likely to be victimized (according to both self- and parent-reports of victimization) 

  • Persistently victimized adolescents: higher risk for increased anxiety 

  • Lack of support for handling victimization in other contexts (not only school, but also in other contexts: for example, at home) 

  • In a period in which “being the same”/” fitting in” matters, minority adolescents (likely also ethnic, physically disabled etc.) are especially likely to be outcasts (because they are different than many others in the context) 

Microaggressions 

  • More subtle, implicit type of victimization 

  • Video about microaggressions 

Microaggressions and depressive symptoms in sexual minority adolescents (article) 

  • Microaggressions related to depressive symptoms in adolescents 

  • Explained by rumination (rethink about thinks over and over again) 

  • Microaggressions are ambiguous and make the victim doubt themselves 

  • Less explicit, but not less serious than explicit harassment 

  • Awareness needed: normalization, not tolerance 

  • Example: GSA's: clubs in schools promoting diversity 

To conclude 

  • Social withdrawal severe type of lack of peer relationships 

  • Subtypes determined by approach versus avoidance motivation: anxious-withdrawn type most problematic 

  • Developmental trajectory: social withdrawal can result in severe, internalizing problems and escalates across childhood and adolescence 

  • Peer victimization 

  • Victims are strategically picked: those who receive least support 

  • Hence, minority adolescents are at risk 

  • Also for microaggressions: more recent, subtle but equally severe form of harassment towards marginalized groups 

Take home message 

  • For adolescents, peers fulfill fundamental psychological needs of belonging (in friendship dyads, or in “fitting in” in groups) and esteem (in status) 

  • Through selection and influence processes, adolescents become more similar to their peers (especially their friends) 

  • Group processes can be visualized through social network analysis, which helps to identify positive, but also negative (bullying) processes 

  • Not fitting in can result in peer victimization, explicitly or more subtle but equally serious (microaggression) 

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