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Third-Party Intervention in Peer Victimization: Self-Evaluative Emotions and Appraisals of a Diverse Adolescent Sample.

Karin S FreyZoe Higheagle StrongAdaurennaya C OnyewuenyiCynthia R PearsonBrendan R Eagan
Published in: Journal of research on adolescence : the official journal of the Society for Research on Adolescence (2020)
African American, European American, Mexican American, and Native American adolescents (N = 270) described how they felt and appraised their own actions in response to a peer's victimization. Analyses compared times they had calmed victim emotions, amplified anger, avenged, and resolved conflicts peacefully. Adolescents felt prouder, more helpful, more like a good friend, and expected more peer approval after calming and resolving than after amplifying anger or avenging peers. They also felt less guilt and shame after calming and resolving. Avenging elicited more positive self-evaluation than amplifying. Epistemic network analyses explored links between self-evaluative and other emotions. Pride was linked to relief after efforts to calm or resolve. Third-party revenge reflected its antisocial and prosocial nature with connections between pride, relief, anger, and guilt.
Keyphrases
  • young adults
  • african american
  • physical activity
  • randomized controlled trial
  • mental health
  • intimate partner violence
  • childhood cancer
  • high school
  • network analysis