Literature DB >> 3608659

The development of companionship and intimacy.

D Buhrmester, W Furman.   

Abstract

This study is concerned with the development of companionship and intimacy. Subjects in the second, fifth, and eighth grades (mean ages, respectively, 7.5, 10.4, and 13.4) rated the importance and extent of companionship and intimate disclosure experienced in social life in general and in each of 8 types of relationships. Companionship was perceived as a desired social provision at all 3 grade levels. Family members were important providers of companionship for children in the second and fifth grades, but they became significantly less so in the eighth grade. Same-sex peers were important providers across all 3 grades, and they became increasingly important as children grew older. Opposite-sex peers did not become important as companions until the eighth grade. Counter to expectations, there were no age differences in the global desire for intimacy. Parents were important providers of intimate disclosure for the youngest children, but they were less important among the younger adolescents. There was mixed support for the hypothesis that same-sex friends become important providers of intimacy during preadolescence. Findings were different for boys and girls, suggesting that girls seek intimate disclosure in friendship at younger ages than boys do.

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Year:  1987        PMID: 3608659     DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-8624.1987.tb01444.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Child Dev        ISSN: 0009-3920


  118 in total

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6.  Parent-Adolescent Relationship Qualities, Internal Working Models, and Styles as Predictors of Adolescents' Observed Interactions with Friends.

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7.  Peer selection and socialization in adolescent depression: the role of school transitions.

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8.  Peer contagion of depressogenic attributional styles among adolescents: a longitudinal study.

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9.  Indirect Effects of Child Reports of Teacher-Student Relationship on Achievement.

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Review 10.  Is neighborhood context differently related to externalizing problems and delinquency for girls compared with boys?

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