Correlational study on cyberbullying and social abilities in intercultural teenagers
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Frontiers
Materia
Cyberbullying Social abilities Teenagers Intercultural Correlational study
Fecha
2022-07-29Referencia bibliográfica
Tomé-Fernández M, Ortiz-Marcos JM and Fernández-Leyva C (2022) Correlational study on cyberbullying and social abilities in intercultural teenagers. Front. Psychol. 13:848678. doi: [10.3389/fpsyg.2022.848678]
Patrocinador
Autonomous City of MelillaResumen
This article analyzes the relationship between cyberbullying profile by racist
reasons and social abilities in a group of intercultural teenagers living in Spain
(N = 1478). The study includes participants aged between 12 and 16 years
old (M = 13.99; SD = 1.352). Of these, 738 were male (49.9%) and 740 were
female (50.1%). A correlational study was carried out using online tools with
suitable psychometrics parameters (content-construct validity and reliability).
The first one was a scale that measured social abilities, and the second one
evaluated racist or xenophobic cyberbullying, differentiating the victim and
aggressor profiles. The results indicated five main findings: (1) generally, the
participants analyzed present all their social abilities; (2) for the most part,
these participants do not normally experience cyberbullying; (3) a positive
correlation exists between the majority of social abilities analyzed and the
cybervictim profile. It was also observed a negative correlation between the
social ability associated with the ability of making requests and this profile;
(4) there is a positive correlation among the six social abilities analyzed
and the cyberaggressor profile; (5) the racist or xenophobic cyberbullying
are driven not only by the absence of social abilities, but in some cases,
they are also driven by socio-demographic variables (i.e., age and gender).
Likewise, this work shows how the absence of some social abilities in
some participants involve racist or xenophobic experiences as victims and as
aggressors, which may be of interest for the analysis of teenagers’ behavior
in intercultural contexts, as well as according to age and gender. More
transcultural research need to be carried out to know the global perspective
of the link between social abilities and the different profiles of racist and
xenophobic cyberbullying, framed in the context of social psychology and
studies of mass communication.