Adolescent friendships offer a crucial context for learning to seek social support. Through repeated social support encounters, adolescents take in social information and shape their own development. The current study characterizes adolescents’ support-seeking discussion topics with close friends, how the topics are influenced by adolescent age and gender, and how they are related to interpersonal processes in close friendships. A community sample of 184 adolescents (85 boys, 99 girls; 58% white, 29% Black, 13% other identity groups) participated annually from age 13 to 18. Through these six waves of data collection, participants completed a total of 859 support-seeking interactions, from which 10 thematic codes were identified. Support-seeking about socially oriented topics (e.g., conflicts with peers, romantic interests) appeared consistently across adolescence, while participants increasingly discussed future-oriented topics (e.g., considering college or work plans) with their friends as they aged. Selection of socially-oriented topics was more common among female dyads and was associated with higher friendship quality, self-disclosure, and emotional support in conversations between adolescent close friends.
- Home
- Our Research
- 2025
- Publications
Publications by Year: 2025
2025
Costello, M. A., Brehm, M. V., Rivens, A. J., Hunt, G. L., Nagel, A. G., & Allen, J. P. (2025). Support-seeking About Social Relationships with Friends is Associated with Friendship Quality, Emotional Support, and Self-Disclosure in Adolescence. Journal of Social and Personal Relationships. https://doi.org/10.1177/02654075251371391 (Original work published 2025)