Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Personal characteristics and contextual factors that determine “helping,” “joining in,” and “doing nothing” when witnessing cyberbullying

Katrien Van Cleemput, Heidi Vandebosch, Sara Pabian

Aggressive Behavior · 2014

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Summary

In this article, we investigated several determinants of bystanders' reactive behaviors when confronted with cyberbullying using self-reported data from 2,333 Flemish 9-16 year olds. Structural equation modeling showed that adolescents that had joined in on the cyberbullying were older, had lower levels of empathy and were more likely to have been involved in cyberbullying or traditional bullying as perpetrators. Adolescents who had helped the victim were younger, had higher levels of empathy and were more likely to have been a victim of cyberbullying or traditional bullying in the past months. Adolescents that did nothing when they witnessed cyberbullying, were also older, showed lower levels of empathy and were less likely to have been a victim of traditional bullying. Social anxiety was

Subject
Other / interdisciplinary
Source type
Peer-reviewed study
System type
Other
DOI
10.1002/ab.21534
Catalogue ID
SNmojj1yox-xm56bp
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