| Literature DB >> 7238142 |
S M Dornbusch, J M Carlsmith, R T Gross, J A Martin, D Jennings, A Rosenberg, P Duke.
Abstract
Data from the U.S. National Health Examination Survey of 12-17-year-old youths were used to determine whether the development of the social behavior of dating is more closely linked to the level of sexual maturation or to the progression through age grades without reference to sexual maturation. Regression analyses and partial correlations show that individuals levels of sexual maturation add very little to the explained variance in dating after age had been taken into account. It appears that social pressures, based on behavior considered typical and appropriate at various ages, determines the onset of dating in adolescents. Individual rates of sexual maturation that deviate from the norm for that age have little impact on dating. These findings show how social standards can reduce dramatically the impact of individual biological processes on institutionalized forms of behavior.Mesh:
Year: 1981 PMID: 7238142
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Child Dev ISSN: 0009-3920