Journal of Social and Personal Relationships

 

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Journal of Social and Personal Relationships, Vol. 25, No. 3, 409-428 (2008)
DOI: 10.1177/0265407508090866

Intimacy in adolescent friendship: The roles of attachment, coherence, and self-disclosure

Nirit Bauminger

Bar Ilan University, Israel, bauminn{at}mail.biu.ac.il

Ricky Finzi-Dottan

Bar Ilan University, Israel

Sagit Chason

Bar Ilan University, Israel

Dov Har-Even

Bar Ilan University, Israel

This study examined attachment, coherence, and self-disclosure as predictors of intimacy in adolescent friendships as well as the extent to which coherence and disclosure mediate the relationship between attachment and intimacy. Gender and grade-level effects on intimacy development were also examined for one hundred ninety-six seventh, eighth and ninth grade students (116 boys and 80 girls). Attachment, coherence, and disclosure strongly predicted intimacy. Self-disclosure and coherence also interacted to influence intimacy where a tendency toward self-disclosure contributes to intimacy to a greater extent at low (when compared to high) levels of coherence. Structural Equation Modeling indicated that only coherence and self-disclosure had a direct effect on intimacy. Avoidant and anxious attachment had an indirect affect on intimacy, and were mediated by coherence and disclosure. Clinical implications of the results are discussed.

Key Words: adolescence • attachment • coherence • friendship • intimacy • self-disclosure


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