| Abstract |  Understanding the determinants of individuals’ perceptions of their risk of becoming infected with  HIV and their perceptions of acceptable strategies of prevention is an essential step toward curtailing  the spread of this disease. We focus in this article on learning and decision-making about AIDS in the  context of high uncertainty about the disease and appropriate behavioral responses. We argue that social interactions are important for both. Using longitudinal survey data from rural Kenya and Malawi,  we test this hypothesis. We investigate whether social interactions—and especially the extent to which  social network partners perceive themselves to be at risk—exert causal in? uences on respondents’ risk  perceptions and on one approach to prevention, spousal communication about the threat of AIDS to the  couple and their children. The study explicitly allows for the possibility that important characteristics,  such as unobserved preferences or community characteristics, determine not only the outcomes of interest but also the size and composition of networks. The most important empirical result is that social  networks have signi? cant and substantial effects on risk perceptions and the adoption of new behaviors  even after we control for unobserved factors. |