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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Resistance to peer influence moderates the relationship between perceived (but not actual) peer norms and binge drinking in a college student social network.

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TLDR
RPI significantly moderated the association between perceptions of peer binge drinking and participant's own binge drinking; this association was weaker among participants with higher RPI compared to those with lower RPI, and RPI did not interact with the actual binge drinking behavior of network peers.
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This article is published in Addictive Behaviors.The article was published on 2017-12-20 and is currently open access. It has received 36 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Binge drinking.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The Impact of COVID-19 Lockdown on Health Behaviors among Students of a French University.

TL;DR: In this paper, an online retrospective survey was distributed to Rouen-Normandy University students at the end of the COVID-19 lockdown (13th March-11th May 2020).
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Future Directions in Peer Relations Research

TL;DR: Recent research on interpersonal determinants of physical health outcomes, and opportunities for greater examination of 1) peer influence processes toward health risk behaviors; 2) neural correlates ofpeer adversity; 3) adverse peer experiences that may affect physiological markers of stress response; and 4) immune system markers of peer adversity are reviewed.
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Using social network analysis to examine alcohol use among adults: A systematic review

TL;DR: As social networks appear to play a role in the consumption of alcohol in young adulthood, interventions that utilize social networks to help reduce harmful alcohol consumption should be considered.
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Cognitive and affective empathy in binge drinking adolescents: Does empathy moderate the effect of self-efficacy in resisting peer pressure to drink?

TL;DR: Investigation of the moderating roles of empathic concerns and perspective-taking in the relationship between self-efficacy in resisting peer pressure to drink (SRPPD) and binge drinking shed light on patterns of cognitive and affective empathy in binge drinking adolescents, providing relevant implications for research and prevention for at-risk teenagers.
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Neurobiological Sensitivity to Social Rewards and Punishments Moderates Link Between Peer Norms and Adolescent Risk Taking.

TL;DR: Ventral striatum (VS) sensitivity when anticipating social rewards and avoiding social punishments significantly moderated the association between perceived peer norms and adolescents' own risk behaviors, providing a novel contribution to the study of peer influence susceptibility.
References
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Book ChapterDOI

A Focus Theory of Normative Conduct: A Theoretical Refinement and Reevaluation of the Role of Norms in Human Behavior

TL;DR: This chapter discusses those injunctive social norms—once activated—is likely to lead to beneficial social conduct across the greatest number of situations and populations.
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Motivations for alcohol use among adolescents: development and validation of a four-factor model

TL;DR: A 4-factor measure of drinking motives based on a conceptual model by Cox and Klinger (1988, 1990) is presented in this article, and confirmatory factor analyses showed that the hypothesized model provided an excellent fit to the data and that the factor pattern was invariant across gender, race, and age.
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Homophily, Selection, and Socialization in Adolescent Friendships

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined longitudinal sociometric data on adolescent friendship pairs, friends-to-be, and former friends to assess levels of homophily on four attributes (frequency of current marijuana, use, level of educational aspirations, political orientation, and participation in minor delinquency) at various stages of friendship formation and dissolution.
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Peer influences on college drinking: A review of the research

TL;DR: This review critically examines the literature on each form of peer influence and provides suggestions for future research.
Journal ArticleDOI

Age Differences in Resistance to Peer Influence

TL;DR: Results show that across all demographic groups, resistance to peer influences increases linearly between ages 14 and 18, and there is little evidence for growth in this capacity between ages 10 and 14 or between 18 and 30.
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