“…Adolescent girls are the focus of intense messaging about both the importance of being sexually attractive to men (American Psychological Association, 2007; Graff et al, 2013), as well as the consequences of being perceived as being too sexually available (Bay‐Cheng, 2015). Girls whose sexual behavior or sexualized appearance is perceived as exceeding social norms, however, are particularly vulnerable to social sanctioning as shown in qualitative research (Armstrong et al, 2014; Hackman et al, 2017; Lyons et al, 2011; Summit et al, 2016), in work linking girls' sexual behavior to peer acceptance (Kreager et al, 2016), and in the continued evidence of double standards where the sexual behavior of men is evaluated more positively than that of women (Endendijk et al, 2020). Girls who engage in, or are perceived as engaging in, sexual behavior or sexualized expression in excess of what is considered acceptable experience victimization and social degradation, a phenomenon popularly referred to as “slut‐shaming” (Sweeney, 2017).…”