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Society and the Adolescent Self-Image
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This article is published in Sociology.The article was published on 1969-05-01. It has received 16312 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Child and adolescent psychiatry.read more
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Correlates and Consequences of Peer Victimization: Gender Differences in Direct and Indirect Forms of Bullying
TL;DR: The authors used data from two waves of a longitudinal panel study of 1,222 youths in 15 schools across the United States to examine the correlates and consequences for both boys and girls of two forms of bullying.
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Social functioning, psychological functioning, and quality of life in epilepsy.
TL;DR: A series of already existing generic and disease‐specific health status measures were used and considered as determinants of people's QoL, whereasQoL itself was conceived as a general “value judgment” about one's life.
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The link between body dissatisfaction and self-esteem in adolescents: Similarities across gender, age, weight status, race/ethnicity, and socioeconomic status
Patricia van den Berg,Jonathan Mond,Marla E. Eisenberg,Diann M. Ackard,Dianne Neumark-Sztainer +4 more
TL;DR: Findings indicate that body dissatisfaction and self-esteem are strongly related among nearly all groups of adolescents, suggesting the importance of addressing body image concerns with adolescents of all backgrounds and ages.
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Comparative effects of two physical activity programs on measured and perceived physical functioning and other health-related quality of life outcomes in older adults.
Abby C. King,Leslie A. Pruitt,Wayne T. Phillips,Roberta K. Oka,Annette Rodenburg,William L. Haskell +5 more
TL;DR: This represents one of the first studies to report significant improvements in an important quality of life outcome-bodily pain-with a regular regimen of stretching and flexibility exercises in a community-based sample of older adults.
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Discrepancies Between Implicit and Explicit Self-Esteem: Implications for Narcissism and Self-Esteem Instability
TL;DR: Two basic findings emerged from the present study, which concluded that participants with discrepant high self-esteem possessed the highest levels of narcissism and participants with high explicit self- esteem and high implicitSelf-esteem displayed the most stable self-confidence.