Why does everyone love the alpha girl?
Why does everyone love the alpha girl?
You know the
type. Depending on your age and / or preferred pop culture, it is possible to
meet her as Rizzo, Cher Horowitz or Regina George, the secondary alpha girl.
She was very popular and confident - and certainly beautiful, but appearances
were only a part of her appeal. She was also relaxed, tending towards the
classic pastime: Class Pass, smoking, drinking, celebrating. Probably his
behavior was horrified at his parents and teachers, which is exactly what
surrounds him so exciting. For years, social scientists have studied its power.
Just what is an alpha girl is so magnetic? Is she born? Or created? And does
she remain forever?
According to
research, it is no coincidence that alpha girls begin to take over early
adolescence. The very definition of popularity begins to change around that
time. "In elementary school, children who are really loved and who arenice are also the popular kids," said Amanda Rose, a researcher in
psychology at the University of Missouri. "But in college, it starts to
change." When high school begins, there are two types of popularity: there
are the beloved students and the emergence of a new group, researchers call
students - stage - are those who dominate their social groups, who may be voted
for the backyard, or Are the captain of the football team.
This
distinction - between state and sympathy - is particularly important in
understanding the alpha girl of her teenage counterpart. Alpha males tend to be
aggressive physical forms to start fighting or pushing each other, while alpha
girls are more likely to act aggressively relational, spread rumors or use the
silent treatment. But the behavior can be interchangeable; Sometimes the boys
and girls are fighting. The most important difference in how they appear to
occur in both male and female alpha traits, according to research is how other
students react to these acts of aggression.
For girls,
"you are more aggressive, you would be less worthy of being loved, but it
will make you more popular," said Mitch Prinstein, a psychologist at the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and author of the upcoming popular
book. The power of sympathy Read more in this obsessed state World "For
the children, many of them can be [high state] and both loved at the same
time.but this is not the case of the girls.The correlation between kindness and
Situation is approaching zero for girls. "Alpha girls are admired and
feared, but they are not usually wanted.
Some alpha
girls were born that way. It will not surprise anyone to learn that research
confirms that attractive and sporting girls who come from higher income
families also tend to be in this high status group. However, others teach
themselves how to become alpha, learn social skills from watching adults, or
their own experiences at a young age. "Even these early experiences in
kindergarten and kindergarten, provided you have a positive social experience,
opens the door to new opportunities to learn increasingly sophisticated
skills," Prinstein said. They learn to be a bit aggressive to ensure their
status, and when to step back and let others get in their way (or at least let
others think they have their own way).
But perhaps
more importantly, why alpha girls have such confidence in their peers can be
explained, at least in part, by the neurological growth experienced by
adolescents. Teen brains are adapted to social rewards, especially receiving
positive feedback from peers, and popular children - boys and girls - seem to
swim in them. "So it makes us want to do everything we can to be like
them," Prinstein said. "The sense of identity [a teenager]
comes." . If everyone else thinks I'm fresh, I'm fine, "Prinstein
said." They can not distinguish between what I think of myself and what
everyone else thinks of me - these are synonymous with this age. "But it
is not just the opinion of someone who has ... for teens, as you no doubt, the
opinions of their peers say everything." The opinion of their parents,
however, means nothing, less than nothing. What adults approve of, the better.
"There is even research showing that adolescent mice prefer to spend time
with other adolescent mice before they are adult mice," Prinstein said.
Hence the
attractiveness of the alpha girl. Older teenagers, according to one study, tend
to behave the way adults are inappropriate, which other teenagers find
fascinating. "They are on the fast track socially," said Joseph
Allen, a psychologist at the University of Virginia. "This means that it
is children who are involved in relationships rather than their peers, which
interfere with minor forms of delinquency." They ignore the class, they
use drugs, they go to parties. They are, in a word, fresh. "It intimidates
other kids," Allen said. "They make the other kids feel so far
behind."
Their
aggressive adult, adult-like-but-not-approved behavior is why they affirm the
central dominant role of their groups of friends, Allen said. This is
equivalent to the notion of autonomy of adolescents. "As a teenager, part
of what they are supposed to do is establish the independence of the adult
world," he said. So some of these risky behaviors - visiting cool teen sex
like sex and drugs and petty crimes like stealing - are ways to say "These
are things that little kids do not do." And I do things that my parents
They do not like it, which means I can be independent, "Allen continued.
One might
suppose, as I did, that the alpha girl at her school has grown to be the Alpha
Daughter Office. But every researcher I spoke with said the opposite; Many of
them reminded me of a fascinating study by Allen and published in Child
Development magazine in 2014, titled: "Children" "What Happened
to the Cold" In this paper Allen and his colleagues interviewed a group of
teenagers - including "High status", also known as the popular
children - when they were in high school, and then followed and retransmitted
ten years later. "And a decade later," Allen said, "they do not
go so well. They do so well in romantic relationships, they are more likely to
have problems with alcohol and criminal behavior."
If you are an
alpha in high school, in other words, you are not necessarily alpha for life.
Social skills that cool girls (and children) learned in high school tend not to
work out very well after they leave. "They have as a reward for this game
of skill and this course of action among others [which] bestow on the situation
as a measure of value," Prinstein said. "They see everything through
a crystalline state, constantly thinking about their relationships in a
hierarchical way, is it what I'm missing or not?" Even ten years after
graduation, it is said that children are always "constantly looking for
these signs and signs, but the world has changed."