Title of article
The Role of Inflexible Friendship Beliefs, Rumination, and Low Self-worth in Early Adolescents’ Friendship Jealousy and Adjustment
Author/Authors
Kristen L. Lavallee، نويسنده , , Jeffrey G. Parker، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages
13
From page
873
To page
885
Abstract
focal social cognitive processes were evaluated
in a structural model for their direct and indirect roles in
early adolescents’ jealousy surrounding their closest friend in
a sample of 325 early adolescents (169 girls and 156 boys)
ages 11–14 years. Individuals who are rigid and unrealistic
about meeting their friendship needs were more vulnerable to
feelings of jealousy than individuals who think more flexibly.
Inflexible individuals also engage in more jealousy-driven
surveillance and other problembehavior towards their friends.
Stronger jealous feelings and behavior were related, in turn, to
greater conflict with friends and to a vulnerability to
emotional maladjustment. In addition, young adolescents
who tended to ruminate over friendship problems were also
more vulnerable to jealousy. Inflexible attitudes and friendship
rumination were positively associated. Results extend
recent models of friendship jealousy that focus only on early
adolescents’ self-worth.
Keywords
Friendship . Jealousy . Loneliness . Depression .Inflexibility . Social cognition . Preadolescent . Adolescent .Rumination . Self-worth . Self-esteem . Flexible thinking .Friendship conflict
Journal title
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Serial Year
2009
Journal title
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Record number
829065
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