Study: Kids Who Like 'Unconventional Music' More Likely to Become Delinquent
By Today's Bieber fans are tomorrow's upstanding citizens.
Thomas Peter/Reuters
PROBLEM: When a kid asserts early on that he
rejects pop music, is it just cute and kind of hipster of him? Or is his
preference for the "noisy, rebellious, nonmainstream" scene something
to keep an eye on?RESULTS: Twelve-year-olds who were into hip-hop, metal, gothic, punk, trance or techno/hardhouse had already begun to "act out," and continued to do so by the time they were 16. Those who liked rock music at age 12 were relatively well-behaved, but were more likely to engage in bad behavior at 16.
Preferring either mainstream pop (or "highbrow" music like classical or jazz, which the researchers considered conventional), on the other hand, did not predict future delinquency, and in some cases was negatively associated with it.
CONCLUSION: Liking music that goes against the mainstream at a young age is a strong predictor of future delinquency in kids.
IMPLICATIONS: The strongest effect seen here existed between music preference at age 12 and delinquency later, at age 16. This suggests that "innocent" enjoyment of "deviant" music may be an early sign that the kids may grow up to be deviants themselves. As the authors theorize, "Music is the medium that separates mainstream youth from young people who may more easily adopt norm-breaking behaviors."
They also suggest that "in peer groups characterized by their deviant music taste, norm-breaking youth may 'infect' their friends with their behavior." Parents, you've been warned.
The full study, "Early Adolescent Music Preferences and Minor Delinquency," is published in the journal Pediatrics.
http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2013/01/study-kids-who-like-unconventional-music-more-likely-to-become-delinquent/267301/
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario