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The more popular the girl, the more distressing the aggressive behavior

Mean acts by close friends were less distressing to adolescent girls than mean

behavior by girls they did not have relationships with, according to research

recently published in Communications Studies. The study was based

on survey responses from 127 girls.

"Although it seems intuitive that mean acts committed by victims' close

friends would be more harmful, it is possible that a variety of factors

contribute to the fact that participants' responses did not support this claim,"

the authors write.

Girls may interpret such acts differently with close friends

or aggressive behavior may form part of the dynamic between

friends, they note. Aggressive acts seem to be most distressing when they

involve girls who are more popular than the victim, the researchers

report.  These acts are more threatening to a girl's social "face",

they theorize. Face is the positive social value a person effectively

claims for oneself during an encounter with others, they write. The higher an

individual's social standing within his or her group, the greater his or her

claim or entitlement to face.

"As predicted, mean acts were perceived by victims to be more face

threatening when they were committed by girls who were more popular than

participants," the authors write. While the presence of witnesses (such as when

comments are made in a class) did not add to girls' distress, the girls reported

greater levels of negative affect and saw it as more face-threatening if more

than one person participated in the act.

"When 'Sugar and Spice' Turn to 'Fire and Ice': Factors Affecting the

Adverse Consequences of Relational Aggression among Adolescent Girls," by Erin

Willer and William Cupach, Communication Studies, October-December 2008, pp.

415-429.

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