| Literature DB >> 31711467 |
Mónica Rodríguez-Enríquez1, Miquel Bennasar-Veny2,3, Alfonso Leiva4,5, Maite Garaigordobil6, Aina M Yañez7,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cyberbullying among children and adolescents is a major public health concern. However, research has not yet definitively identified the risk factors associated with cybervictimization. The purpose of this study was to determine the association of cybervictimization with use of social networks, personality traits and parental education in secondary students.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescents; Cyberbullying; Cybervictimization; Personality; School; Social networking time
Year: 2019 PMID: 31711467 PMCID: PMC6849165 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-019-7876-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Characteristics of students who were and were not victims of cyberbullying
| Total Sample | Victims | Non-Victims | Effect Sizeb) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | 14.99 (0.66) | 14.95 (0.67) | 15.03 (0.65) | 0.110 | |
| Sex | −0.074 | ||||
| Female | 432 (56.5%) | 186 (43.1%) | 246 (56.9%) | ||
| Male | 333 (43.5%) | 119 (35.7%) | 214 (64.3%) | ||
| Mother’s education | 0.096 | ||||
| Less than primary | 23 (4.4%) | 12 (5.9%) | 11 (3.4%) | ||
| Only Primary | 111 (21.1%) | 52 (25.5%) | 59 (18.4%) | ||
| Secondary | 225 (42.9%) | 79 (38.7%) | 146 (45.5%) | ||
| University | 166 (31.6%) | 61 (29.9%) | 105 (32.7%) | ||
| Father’s education | |||||
| Less than primary | 26 (5.1%) | 11 (5.5%) | 15 (4.8%) | 0.717 | |
| Only Primary | 122 (23.8%) | 46 (23.0%) | 76 (24.4%) | ||
| Secondary | 261 (51.0%) | 107 (53.5%) | 154 (49.4%) | ||
| University | 103 (20.1%) | 36 (18.0%) | 67 (21.5%) | ||
| Social network use and screen time | |||||
| Daily screen time, min | 338 (288) | 375 (306) | 316 (274) | 0.203 | |
| Daily screen minutes, z-score | 0 (1) | 0.12 (1.06) | −0.076 (0.95) | ||
| Daily social networks, min/week | 338 (359) | 390 (371) | 308 (349) | 0.228 | |
| Daily social networks minutes, z-score | 0 (1) | 0.14 (1.035) | −0.86 (0.97) | ||
| Personality traits, z-score | |||||
| Openness | 0 (1) | 0.023 (1.024) | −0.021 (0.990) | 0.561 | |
| Conscientiousness | 0 (1) | −0.124 (1.019) | 0.080 (0.976) | 0.314 | |
| Extraversion | 0 (1) | 0.131 (1.041) | −0.074 (0.955) | −0.207 | |
| Agreeableness | 0 (1) | 0.019 (1.044) | −0.007 (0.960) | 0.730 | |
| Emotional Instability | 0 (1) | 0.240 (1.045) | −0.167 (0.928) | −0.417 | |
a) Student’s t-test or Chi-square test. b) Effect size were estimated as Cramer’s V for categorical variables or d-Cohen’s d for continuous variables
Multivariable analysis of the association of student characteristics with cybervictimization
| Model 1a) | Model 2b) | Model 3c) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age | 1.197 (0.947–1.513) | 1.276 (.985–1.653) | |
| Female | 1.268 (0.882–1.822) | 1.331 (0.980–1.809) | 1.231 (0.854–1.774) |
| Parental education | |||
| Mother education (secondary or more) | 1.060 (0.695–1.617) | 1.010 (.693–1.474) | 1.080 (0.707–1.651) |
| Father education (secondary or more) | 1.023 (0.693–1.509) | 1.098 (0.772–1.562) | 0.990 (0.669–1.465) |
| Personality traits, z-score | |||
| Openness | 1.070 (0.901–1.271) | _ | 1.074 (0.903–1.279) |
| Conscientiousness | _ | ||
| Extraversion | _ | ||
| Agreeableness | 1.035 (0.835–1.284) | _ | 1.037 (0.834–1.289) |
| Emotional Instability | _ | ||
| Social network use | |||
| Daily social network use | 1.109 (.938–1.311) | ||
Logistic regression analysis; a) Model 1: X2 = 57.70; p > 0.001; −2loglikelihood = 845.51; Nagelkerke R2 = 0.08 b) Model 2: X2 = 14.40; p = 0.006; −2loglikelihood = 978.58; Nagelkerke R2 = 0.03; c) Model 3: X2 = 60.53; p > 0.001; −2loglikelihood = 849.41; Nagelkerke R2 = 0.12