Affiliation:
1. Research Center of Psychology and Social Development Southwest University Chongqing China
2. Faculty of Psychology Southwest University Chongqing China
Abstract
AbstractCyberbullying is a new form of aggression and can have serious consequences. Although the influencing factors of cyberbullying have been explored in the literature, less is known of the longitudinal effects of relative deprivation on cyberbullying and the mediating mechanisms underlying the effect. In this study, we explored these problems. A total of 1143 undergraduates (62.9% women, mean age = 19.46, standard deviation [SD] = 0.95) participated in three rounds of a longitudinal survey with an interval of 6 months and completed a series of self‐reported questionnaires assessing relative deprivation, revenge, and cyberbullying. The results of random intercept cross‐lagged panel model showed that at between‐person level, the random intercepts of relative deprivation, revenge, and cyberbullying were positively associated with each other. At within‐person level, relative deprivation and revenge could predict each other over time, and revenge longitudinally predicted cyberbullying. Moreover, revenge mediated the longitudinal effect of relative deprivation on cyberbullying. The results support and develop the view of the general aggression model and deepen our understanding of the development mechanism of cyberbullying.
Subject
General Psychology,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Developmental and Educational Psychology
Cited by
4 articles.
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