Title: Social and Emotional Costs of
1Social and Emotional Costs of One-Sided
Friendships in Adolescence.Lauren Molloy
Joseph P. AllenUniversity of VirginiaWe would
like to thank the National Institute of Child
Health Human Development for funding awarded to
Joseph P. Allen, Principal Investigator, (R01
HD058305 R01-MH58066) for funding to conduct
this study as well as for the write-up of this
study.
Introduction
Discussion
Results
- Individuals self-attitudes and relational
schemas have long been theorized to originate
from past relationship experiences (Bowlby, 1969
Cooley, 1922) - Difficulty establishing positive peer
relationships in adolescence is a known risk
factor for later adjustment difficulties (e.g.,
Bukowski, Laursen, Hoza, 2010 Prinstein
Aikins, 2004) - Much less known about maladaptive patterns of
interaction within youths friendships that may
contribute to longer-term functioning - What happens when youth experience asymmetry in a
close friendship i.e., a one-sided friendship
where one member of the dyad is more invested
and works harder than the other to maintain the
friendship? - Present study examines the hypothesis that being
in the more invested role in a one-sided
friendship may have lasting implications for
adolescents social and emotional development - Hypotheses
- One-sided friendships in adolescence will predict
relative increases in internalizing symptoms
(anxiety and depression) - One-sided friendships in adolescence will predict
poorer relational functioning in early adulthood,
in the form of a) lower self-perceived social
competence, and b) greater likelihood of
relational victimization in romantic relationships
- Consistent with hypotheses, findings suggest
that experience in the more invested role in a
one-sided friendship during middle adolescence
may have longer-term costs for individuals
social and emotional development - Relative increases in anxiety and depressive
symptoms - Relative declines in self-perceived social
competence - More likely to experience relational
victimization in a romantic relationship in early
adulthood - Perhaps these experiences come to shape teens
views and expectations of themselves and their
future relationships - Teens in one-sided friendships may implicitly
learn - That they are not valued or valuable feelings
that commonly underlie internalizing disorders - That they are not deserving of healthy and
balanced relationships a belief or expectation
likely to perpetuate the pattern
1. Teens in more invested role in a one-sided
friendship during middle adolescence experienced
relative increases in internalizing symptoms in
late adolescence
2a. Teens in more invested role in a one-sided
friendship during middle adolescence experienced
relative declines in self-perceptions of social
competence in late adolescence
Conclusions
- Findings suggest a significant link between the
experience of friendship asymmetry in middle
adolescence and the development of internalizing
symptoms and later relational functioning. - Youth who are able to maintain connectedness
during a disagreement typically fare better in
their peer relationships and overall well-being.
Yet the present findings reveal how such efforts
can be detrimental when unreciprocated. - Thus, while prevention efforts should continue to
target the social skills of individual youth, the
present findings implicate friendship dynamics as
an important additional target for intervention.
For instance, teaching youth how to - Choose and establish healthy, reciprocal
friendships - Ensure that ones own needs are being met in
relationships - Recognize unhealthy, asymmetrical friendships
- Address asymmetry in a productive, assertive way
Methods
- Participants
- 184 adolescents (socioeconomically and racially
diverse) followed over a six-year period from
ages 15-21 - Measures
- Friendship asymmetry
- Age 15 observed teens discussing disagreement
with close friend, coded for behaviors promoting
their connectedness (e.g., warmth, validating)
(Allen et al., 1994) - Computed difference score representing asymmetry
between teens and friends behaviors - Depressive symptoms age 15 self-report via
Childhood Depression Inventory (CDI Kovacs
Beck, 1977) and age 18 self-report via the Beck
Depression Inventory (BDI Beck Steer, 1987) - Anxiety symptoms age 15 self-report via Beck
Anxiety Inventory (BAI Beck Steer, 1993) and
age 18 self-report via the State-Trait Anxiety
Inventory (STAI Spielberger, 1985) - Self-perceptions of social competence ages 15
and 18 self-report via the Harter Self-Perception
Profile for Adolescents (Harter, 1988) - Relational victimization age 20-22, romantic
partners reported on the level of relational
aggression they showed toward target participant
(Morales Crick, unpublished measure)
2b. Teens in more invested role in a one-sided
friendship during middle adolescence were more
likely to experience relational victimization in
a romantic relationship in young adulthood.
References Bowlby, J. (1969). Attachment and
loss Vol. 1. attachment. New York Basic
Books. Bukowski, W. M., Laursen, B., Hoza, B.
(2010). The snowball effect Friendship moderates
escalations in depressed affect among avoidant
and excluded children. Development and
Psychopathology, 22, 749-757. doi
10.1017/S095457941000043X Cooley, C. H. (1922).
Human Nature and the Social Order. New York
Scribner Sons. Prinstein, M. J. Aikins, J.
W. (2004). Cognitive moderators of the
longitudinal association between peer rejection
and adolescent depressive symptoms. Journal of
Abnormal Child Psychology, 32, 147-158.
Thoughts? Questions? Ideas? E-mail Lauren Molloy
at lmolloy_at_virginia.edu