Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Boys more relationally aggressive than girls

Darpan News Desk IANS, 02 Dec, 2014 10:35 AM
    Contrary to popular belief, tactics such as spreading malicious rumours, social exclusion and rejection to harm or manipulate others are used more often by boys than girls, says a new research.
     
    At every grade level, boys engaged in such relationally aggressive behaviour more often than girls, showed the findings of the study that followed a cohort of students from middle to high school.
     
    "We have books, websites and conferences aimed at stopping girls from being aggressive, as well as a lot of qualitative research on why girls are relationally aggressive," said lead researcher Pamela Orpinas, professor at the University of Georgia in the US.
     
    "But oddly enough, we do not have enough research on why boys would be relationally aggressive because people have assumed it's a girl behaviour," Orpinas added.
     
    The researchers analysed data collected from 620 students.
     
    Students who participated in the study completed yearly surveys, which allowed the researchers to identify and group them in distinct trajectories for relational aggression and victimization as they progressed from grade six to 12.
     
    The researchers found that girls are more likely than boys to be targets of relational aggression.
     
    "Overall, we found relational aggression to be a very common behaviour. Almost all of the students surveyed, 96 percent, had passed a rumour or made a nasty comment about someone over the course of the seven-year study," Orpinas said.
     
    The findings ultimately emphasise a need to include boys and girls equally in programmes aimed at reducing relational aggression.
     
    The study was published online in the journal Aggressive Behavior.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Feeling wealthy makes you conservative

    Feeling wealthy makes you conservative
    People who feel wealthier are more likely to be politically conservative and oppose policies supporting wealth redistribution, shows a new research....

    Feeling wealthy makes you conservative

    Problem gamblers suffer from personality disorders

    Problem gamblers suffer from personality disorders
    The treatment of people who cannot keep their gambling habits in check is often complicated because they also tend to suffer from personality disorders, says a new research....

    Problem gamblers suffer from personality disorders

    Family verbal fights help kids tackle stress later

    Family verbal fights help kids tackle stress later
    Children who get exposed to intense verbal aggression in family can better handle intense conflict later in life, finds research....

    Family verbal fights help kids tackle stress later

    'Teenagers using anti-anxiety, sleeping pills to get high'

    'Teenagers using anti-anxiety, sleeping pills to get high'
    Doctors may inadvertently be creating a new generation of illegal, recreational drug users by prescribing anti-anxiety or sleep medications to teenagers...

    'Teenagers using anti-anxiety, sleeping pills to get high'

    Toddlers remember good times for life

    Toddlers remember good times for life
    According to researchers from the Utah-based Brigham Young University, babies are more likely to remember an incident if there is a positive emotion or affect that accompanies it....

    Toddlers remember good times for life

    Merry Marijuana: New Recreational Pot Industry Courts Holiday Shoppers

    Merry Marijuana: New Recreational Pot Industry Courts Holiday Shoppers
    From new marijuana strains for the holidays to gift sets and pot-and-pumpkin pies, the burgeoning marijuana industry in Colorado is scrambling to get a piece of the holiday shopping dollar.

    Merry Marijuana: New Recreational Pot Industry Courts Holiday Shoppers