The researchers found that the greatest smoking reduction effects were achieved when interventions targeted only a small number of closely connected individuals. The findings of this study provide practical insights for designing social network-based interventions that effectively leverage peer influence. Peer influences play a powerful role in shaping adolescent behavior, especially in health-related habits such as smoking, as behaviors and norms are disseminated through social networks during developmentally sensitive periods.
Previous research has shown that such effects can cascade across friendships and friends of friends, but it remains unclear how quickly the effects fade with social distance and how social network structure influences this process. Cheng Wang and colleagues used the Stochastic Actor-Oriented Model (SAOMS) and data from 3,154 students from two schools in the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health) dataset to investigate how peer influence is attenuated over social distance. To better understand how the effects of behavior spread and diminish, they evaluated the effectiveness of different smoking cessation intervention strategies, targeting either random students or the most central students within their social networks.
king Others. found that peer influence in the context of a smoking reduction intervention spanned up to three degrees of separation from the intervention target. Targeting the 10-30% of individuals who are highly connected within a social network significantly reduced smoking, but increasing coverage beyond 40-50% diminished effectiveness as the network became saturated. Furthermore, the authors found that social network structure was important. For example, when the network is dense, influence spreads more widely and decays more slowly, whereas when the network is sparse, the spread is more limited.
sauce:
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
Reference magazines:
DOI: 10.1126/science.aea9297

