The PROSPER study is the premier study of adolescent peer networks in the world, with a scope of over 12,000 youth in 28 school districts, and with 8 annual waves of data collection covering grades 6-12. Research output from the PROSPER study has provided extensive new insights in the areas of adolescent development, risky behaviors, and social networks.Through the lens of the PROSPER study, Teen Friendship Networks, Development, and Risky Behavior describes the many ways that adolescent friendship networks channel and facilitate the spread of adolescent substance use, delinquent behaviors, mental health problems, educational success, romantic relationships, and future development. Introductory chapters explain the theories of adolescent development and the elements of peer network science. The chapters of the main part of the bookeach focus on a domain of adolescent behavior, providing background on the topic and highlighting the contribution of the PROSPER study to understanding the way teen friendships operate to promote initiation or diffusion of the behavior or attribute. With coverage of major themes such as the ways that teens select friends based on particular characteristics or similarity between them, and the ways that friends, once selected, influence each other, as well as discussion of how friendship and network patterns are linked to the uptake and spread of positive prevention messages, Teen Friendship Networks, Development, and Risky Behavior will appeal to researchers and students across several fields.
Section I: Setting the Stage; Chapter 1: Friendships and Peer Groups in the Teen Years-Our Perspective; D. Wayne Osgood; Chapter 2: Overview of the PROSPER Prevention Trials Rationale, Methods, and Findings: The Context for Friendship Network Study; Richard Spoth, Lisa M. Schainker, Mark Greenberg, and Janet Welsh; Chapter 3: Network Methods: Explanations and Issues; James Moody and D. Wayne Osgood; Chapter 4: A Descriptive Overview of Social Networks and Behavior Among PROSPER Youth; Erin Tinney; Section II: Risky Behaviors, Relationships, and Development; Chapter 5: Teen Friendships, Networks, and Substance Use; Daniel T. Ragan and D. Wayne Osgood; Chapter 6: Does Criminal Justice Contact Alter Friendship Ties?; Wade C. Jacobsen and Erin Tinney; Chapter 7: Depression, Isolation, and Self-Harm; Molly Copeland and Sonja Siennick; Chapter 8: The Role of Parenting in Shaping the Friendship Context of Adolescent Substance Use; Kelly L. Rulison, Avery Chahl, and Evelien M. Hoeben; Chapter 9: Dating, Sexuality, and Adolescent Friendship Networks; Nayan G. Ramirez, Rose Wesche, and Derek A. Kreager; Chapter 10: Variation in Network Processes Across Community and School District Contexts; Cassie McMillan, Daniel Ragan, and Alana Colindres; Chapter 11: Peer Networks and the Diffusion of Intervention Outcomes; Kelly L. Rulison and Mark E. Feinberg; Chapter 12: Genetic Susceptibility to Peers; Gabriel L. Schlomer, Amanda M. Griffin, H. Harrington Cleveland, and David J. Vandenbergh; Section III: Discussion and Conclusions; Chapter 13: Future Directions for Research on Networks and Adolescent Health; Thomas W. Valente; Chapter 14: The Growth of Longitudinal Social Network Analysis; Rene Veenstra, Teresa Bertogna, and Lydia Laninga-Wijnen; Chapter 15: Social Capital and Adolescent Development; Mark Feinberg; Publications of the PROSPER Peers Project; PROSPER Peers Project Personnel;
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