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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2020 Sep 1.
Published in final edited form as: J Child Fam Stud. 2018 May 17;28(9):2558–2571. doi: 10.1007/s10826-018-1109-1

Table 2.

Daily Reporting of Study Variables in the Aggregate (N = 204; Boys = 91, Girl = 113)

Variable Boys Girls
Number of teens % of teens with at least one event Days % of Daysa Number of boys % of teens with at least one event Days % of Daysb Number of girls % of teens with at least one event Days % of Daysb
Bully victimization 138 67.6 562 5.9 52 57.1 191 4.5 86 76.1 371 7.0
Bully perpetration 59 28.9 182 1.9 24 26.4 94 2.2 35 31.0 88 1.7
Sadnessc 200 98.0 4,195 43.7 87 95.6 1,704 39.8 113 100 2,491 46.8
Angerc 203 99.5 4,656 48.5 90 98.9 1,937 45.2 113 100 2,719 51.1
Cigarette use 11 5.4 103 1.1 6 6.6 72 1.7 5 4.4 31 0.6
E-cigarette use 30 14.7 211 2.2 13 14.3 72 1.7 17 15.0 139 2.6
Alcohol use 37 18.1 125 1.3 11 12.1 35 0.8 26 23.0 90 1.7
Marijuana use 24 11.8 112 1.2 12 13.2 27 0.6 12 10.6 52 1.0

Note:

a

Reports based on a total 9,600 days.

b

Reports based on a total 4,283 days for boys and 5,317 days for girls.

c

Days of Sadness included any days in which teens reported they felt “a little bit”, “moderately”, “quite a bit” or “extremely” sad or gloomy; Days of Anger referred to any days in which teens reported they felt “a little bit”, “moderately”, “quite a bit” or “extremely” angry or irritable.