| Literature DB >> 27375346 |
Kyriaki Fousiani1, Panagiota Dimitropoulou2, Michalis P Michaelides3, Stijn Van Petegem4.
Abstract
Due to the progress in information technology, cyber-bullying is becoming one of the most common forms of interpersonal harm, especially among teenagers. The present study (N = 548) aimed to investigate the relation between perceived parenting style (in terms of autonomy support and psychological control) and cyber-bullying in adolescence. Thereby, the study tested for the intervening role of adolescent need satisfaction (i.e., autonomy and relatedness), empathic concern towards others, and adolescents' recognition of full humanness to cyber-bullying offenders and victims. Findings revealed both a direct and an indirect relation between parenting and cyber-bullying. More specifically, parental psychological control directly predicted cyber-bullying, whereas parental autonomy support related to less cyber-bullying indirectly, as it was associated with the satisfaction of adolescents' need for autonomy, which predicted more empathic concern towards others, which in turn differentially related to recognition of humanness to victims and bullies. The discussion focuses on the implications of the current findings.Entities:
Keywords: Autonomy; Cyber-bullying offending; Empathic concern; Humanness; Parental autonomy support; Parental psychological control; Relatedness
Year: 2016 PMID: 27375346 PMCID: PMC4906072 DOI: 10.1007/s10826-016-0401-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Child Fam Stud ISSN: 1062-1024
Descriptive statistics for the variables in the study
| # items | Mean | SD | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. AS | 5 | 5.45 | 1.15 | −.47** | .48** | −.20** | .39** | −.25** | .21** | −.09* | .09* | −.09* | .04 | −.05 |
| 2. PC | 8 | 2.43 | 1.08 | −.28** | .38** | −.31** | .39** | −.11* | .21** | −.02 | .18** | .06 | .21** | |
| 3. Autonomy satisfaction | 4 | 5.42 | 1.15 | −.19** | .44** | −.30** | .21** | −.12** | .08 | −.11* | .08 | −.01 | ||
| 4. Autonomy frustration | 4 | 3.82 | 1.28 | −.08 | .34** | −.02 | .12** | .00 | .15** | .06 | .12** | |||
| 5. Relatedness satisfaction | 4 | 5.82 | 1.05 | −.52** | .19** | −.15** | .08 | −.14** | .10* | −.11** | ||||
| 6. Relatedness frustration | 4 | 2.31 | 1.20 | −.03 | .19** | −.02 | .17** | .06 | .18** | |||||
| 7. Empathy Concern | 7 | 5.45 | .90 | −.30** | .15** | −.24** | .09* | −.28** | ||||||
| 8. UH Bullies | 4 | 1.93 | 1.20 | .02 | .72** | .05 | .31** | |||||||
| 9. UH Victims | 4 | 4.07 | 1.52 | .03 | .61** | −.15** | ||||||||
| 10. HN Bullies | 3 | 2.00 | 1.36 | .06 | .24** | |||||||||
| 11. HN Victims | 2 | 4.07 | 1.70 | −.07 | ||||||||||
| 12. Cyber-bullying | 5 | 1.74 | 1.12 |
AS autonomy support, PC psychological control, UN uniquely human characteristics, HN human nature traits
* p < .05; ** p < .01
Fig. 1Model 1 after trimming. Note All variables are latent, indicators and covariances between AS and PC and between Autonomy and Relatedness are not depicted on the figure. Numbers represent standardized estimates of regression paths. AS autonomy support, PC psychological control
Fig. 2Model 2 after trimming. Note All variables are latent, indicators and covariances between AS and PC and between Autonomy and Relatedness not depicted on the figure. Numbers represent standardized estimates of regression paths. AS autonomy support, PC psychological control
Fig. 3Model 3 after trimming. Note All variables are latent, indicators and covariances between AS and PC, between Autonomy and Relatedness, between the humanness variables for bullies, and between the humanness variables for victims not depicted on the figure. Numbers represent standardized estimates of regression paths. AS autonomy support, PC psychological control, UN uniquely human characteristics, HN human nature traits