以同龄人为媒介的社交信号会改变青少年的风险承受能力。

IF 1 3区 教育学 Q3 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Teaching Sociology Pub Date : 2024-05-01 DOI:10.32598/bcn.2023.5331.1
Amir Hossein Tehrani-Safa, Reza Ghaderi, Mohammad Herasat, Atiye Sarabi-Jamab
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引用次数: 0

摘要

引言在青春期早期,同伴的影响对学习和决策偏好的形成起着至关重要的作用。当青少年观察同龄人的行为时,他们可以学习并改变自己的行为,尤其是当他们要承担风险时。我们的研究结合了经济行为任务和计算建模框架,以考察当早期男性青少年看到同伴的选择信息时,他们的风险态度是否以及如何发生变化:我们招募了 38 名 12-15 岁的初中男生。实验包括三个环节:第一和第三个环节旨在评估参与者的风险态度。在第二个环节中,参与者被要求猜测同龄人的选择,然后计算机会对他们预测的正确性给出反馈。每个参与者都被随机分配到承担风险或规避风险的同伴中:结果:我们的研究结果表明,预测规避风险同伴的青少年在最后一个环节中的风险态度明显下降。另一方面,预测了寻求风险同伴的受试者在预测同伴后表现出了明显更高的风险态度水平。数据显示,这些受同伴影响的风险态度变化与青少年及其同伴的风险观点之间的差距成正比。结果显示,在接受信息后,他们的观点更加一致,约三分之一的差距被消除:在此,我们结合选择数据和计算模型,证明了风险行为在男性青少年中具有传染性。根据我们的数据,同伴间的风险传染是一个社会动机和深思熟虑的过程,与青少年的社会距离有关。这里没有因果方向性,但我们可以推测,作为一种适应过程,同伴影响与社会融合是相辅相成的。
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Peer-mediated Social Signals Alter Risk Tolerance in Teenage Boys Depending on their Peers.

Introduction: During early adolescence, peer influences play a crucial role in shaping learning and decision preferences. When teens observe what their peers are doing, they can learn and change their behavior, especially when they are taking risks. Our study incorporated an economical behavioral task and computational modeling framework to examine whether and how early male adolescents' risk attitudes change when they see information about their peers' choices.

Methods: We recruited 38 middle school male students aged 12-15 years. The experiment consisted of three sessions: The first and third sessions were designed to evaluate the risk attitude of the participants. In the second session, participants were asked to guess the choices made by their peers, and then, the computer gave them feedback on the correctness of their predictions. Each participant was randomly assigned to risk-taking or risk-averse peers.

Results: Our results revealed that teenagers who predicted risk-averse peers exhibited significant declines in their risk attitudes during the last session. On the other hand, participants with risk-seeking peers exhibited a significantly higher level of risk attitudes after predicting their peers. The data showed that these peer-biased changes in risk attitudes are proportional to the gap between teens and their peers' risk perspectives. Results showed that their perspectives aligned closer after receiving the information, and approximately a third of the gap was eliminated.

Conclusion: Here, by combining choice data and computational modeling, we demonstrate that risky behavior is contagious among male adolescents. According to our data, peer-biased risk contagion, a socially motivated and deliberate process, is associated with social distance in teens. There's no causal directionality here, but we could speculate that peer influence goes hand-in-hand with social integration as an adaptive process.

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来源期刊
Teaching Sociology
Teaching Sociology Multiple-
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
31.80%
发文量
56
期刊介绍: Teaching Sociology (TS) publishes articles, notes, and reviews intended to be helpful to the discipline"s teachers. Articles range from experimental studies of teaching and learning to broad, synthetic essays on pedagogically important issues. Notes focus on specific teaching issues or techniques. The general intent is to share theoretically stimulating and practically useful information and advice with teachers. Formats include full-length articles; notes of 10 pages or less; interviews, review essays; reviews of books, films, videos, and software; and conversations.
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