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File: 1759675448754058.jpg (173 KB, 1920x1080)
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https://www.psypost.org/the-gender-friendship-gap-is-driven-primarily-by-white-men-not-a-universal-difference-across-groups/
For years, researchers have claimed that men’s friendships are shallower and less emotionally supportive than women’s, a pattern called the “gender friendship gap.” But new research challenges how universal that really is. Published in Sex Roles, the study finds that the gap is largely driven by white men specifically, not men as a whole.

Much of the work on the gender friendship gap has relied on predominantly white, middle-class samples, which raises an important question: do these patterns actually apply across different racial and socioeconomic groups?

Researcher Emily C. Fox revisited this assumption by taking an intersectional approach, examining how gender and ethnoracial identity jointly shape friendship experiences. Drawing on prior research suggesting that social context, marginalization, and cultural norms influence how friendships are formed and maintained, the author questioned whether the “gap” reflects a universal gender difference or whether it is concentrated within specific groups.

The study used data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1997 cohort, a large, nationally representative U.S. sample tracked over time. Fox focused on respondents who, in 2002, were between 18 and 21 and had identified a best friend who wasn’t a parent, romantic partner, or co-parent. The final sample included 1,765 participants across Black, Latino/a, and white ethnoracial groups.
>>
Participants were asked to think about their best friend and report how close they felt to that person using a 0 to 10 scale. Participants also provided demographic information such as gender and ethnoracial identity, as well as a proxy for socioeconomic background based on the educational attainment of a participant’s residential guardian. The dataset included information about the friend’s characteristics, such as whether they were the same gender or ethnoracial group, how similar they were in age, and how long the friendship had lasted, allowing the researcher to account for similarities between friends that might influence closeness.

The study also looked at how friends actually interacted. Participants reported how often they communicated with their best friend in a typical month, how often they discussed personal relationships or sought advice, used as a measure of emotional support, and how often they talked about education or career decisions, capturing practical support.

Overall, participants reported high levels of closeness with their best friend, suggesting that these relationships were meaningful and emotionally significant. Initial comparisons showed that women reported feeling closer to their best friend than men, and that closeness also varied across ethnoracial groups.

A closer look at these patterns revealed that the differences were not uniform. Black men and Black women reported similar levels of closeness, while Latino men reported somewhat lower closeness than Latina women. The largest gap appeared among white participants, where white men reported noticeably lower closeness than white women.
When communication patterns were factored in, some of these differences shifted. Among Latino participants, differences in how often men and women had emotionally supportive conversations helped explain the closeness gap; once those interaction patterns were accounted for, the difference between Latino men and women was no longer significant.
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The friendship gap between white men and white women, however, held up even after accounting for communication frequency and the kinds of conversations they had, pointing to other factors at play.

Looking across groups, a consistent pattern emerged in which emotional support, especially discussing personal relationships and seeking advice, was strongly associated with greater closeness, regardless of ethnoracial identity. At the same time, other influences varied by group.

For example, socioeconomic background showed a small but meaningful association with closeness among white participants, with those from more advantaged backgrounds reporting slightly less closeness. Additionally, friendship similarities, such as sharing the same gender or racial identity, didn’t consistently predict closeness across all groups, suggesting the factors that shape friendship quality depend heavily on social context.

Of note is that this study focused on young adults aged 18 to 21, which may limit generalizability to older populations or different life stages. The dataset also did not include all racial groups in sufficient numbers for analysis, leading to the exclusion of some smaller ethnoracial categories.

Taken together, these findings suggest that the gender friendship gap is not a universal feature of human relationships but instead reflects the specific experiences of white men, underscoring the importance of considering race and social context in psychological research.

The research “Are White Men Missing Out?: Differences in Friendship Closeness by Gender and Ethnoracial Identity” was authored by Emily C. Fox.
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>>1511600
>For years, researchers have claimed that men’s friendships are shallower and less emotionally supportive than women’s, a pattern called the “gender friendship gap.”
And just like that, I'm done reading. Congratulations on the gayest thread in the entire site.
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>>1511602
>Of note is that this study focused on young adults aged 18 to 21, which may limit generalizability to older populations or different life stages. The dataset also did not include all racial groups in sufficient numbers for analysis, leading to the exclusion of some smaller ethnoracial categories.
That's some important context for a 12th paragraph.
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>>1511600
this isn't new, male friendships almost always when one of them enter a relationship, while women friendships are lasting.
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>>1511605
>>1511604
Damage control used to mean something.
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>>1511608
>excludes Asians
>excludes everyone not college age americans
Studies have limitations but framing it in this way borders on malicious.
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Oh yeah not to mention the dataset was taken in
>2002
So this could not even be helpful for addressing the needs of the current cohort of young white men if that's the goal.
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>>1511600
see
>>1401181
>News articles must be recent! Nothing older than 48 hours please.
I think this 2002 study is older than 48 hours old
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>>1511628
>>1511611
Why are you incorrectly trying to backseat mod?
The article is from May 2nd, 2026.
With the study being done in March and the findings more recently published.
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>>1511636
Yes, this this news article calls on that study from the late '90s to examine the situation today.

I detest janitors and hall monitors that overreach their authority. They need to stick to pushing a broom and cleaning toilets as they have neither the IQ or education to be making editorial decisions.

As to The article, I find that Chinese men have small circles of very close friends.

I believe this is due to the shortage of woman in the late part of the 20th century, and that ChyyNese men at that time had homosexual relationships to compensate for their lack of woman
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>>1511677
It's just another case of the right wing trying to censor information that harms their narratives.



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