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Introduction: This study examines how perceived pressure from parents and friends to attain social status moderates the relationship between peer status (popularity, social preference) and popularity-motivated aggression (relational aggression, cyber aggression) over 1 year. Methods: A sample of 767 eighth-grade students completed self-reported measures of aggression and peer nominations of popularity and social preference. Results: Structural equation modeling showed that popularity was positively associated with both types of aggression, while social preference was negatively associated. Higher perceived pressure from parents and friends to be popular strengthened the link between popularity and aggression, whereas pressure to be socially preferred was negatively related to aggression. Discussion: These findings highlight the role of socialization agents in shaping adolescent aggression, supporting social learning theory and the dual influence model. Implications suggest the need for parental and peer interventions to mitigate status-driven aggression and encourage positive social behaviors.
Wright et al. (Tue,) studied this question.