Publication Type

Journal Article

Version

acceptedVersion

Publication Date

10-2024

Abstract

The growth of the internet and social media as a communication platform has increased the incidence of cyberbullying victimisation. While there has been increasing research interest on the antecedents of cyberbullying perpetration, little is known on why some individuals who themself experience cyber victimisation are more likely to become cyberbullying perpetrators. Considering the large number of individuals who experience cyberbullying victimisation in the current, highly digitalised world, this trend of victims turning into bullies poses a worrisome possibility and deserves research attention. One promising individual difference that could potentially moderate the relationship between cyberbullying victimisation can lead to cyberbullying perpetration is trait online disinhibition, the idea that people separate their online and offline lives, and experience a reduced sense of responsibility for their online actions. As such, the current study utilised data from a large sample of young adults (N = 259) in order to examine the exacerbating role of trait online disinhibition on the relationship between cyberbullying victimisation and cyberbullying perpetration. Regression analysis indicated that individuals with high trait online disinhibition were significantly more likely to become cyberbullying perpetrators after being victimised. These findings underscore the importance of addressing online disinhibition tendencies in order to break the victim-bully cycle and emphasise the need for developing features and guidelines aimed at reducing features such as perceptions of anonymity that contribute to disinhibition on online platforms.

Keywords

Cyber-victimisation, Cyberbullying, Online disinhibition

Discipline

Applied Behavior Analysis | Social Psychology

Research Areas

Psychology

Publication

Journal of Technology in Behavioral Science

First Page

1

Last Page

13

ISSN

2366-5963

Identifier

10.1007/s41347-024-00450-6

Publisher

Springer

Copyright Owner and License

Authors

Additional URL

https://doi.org/10.1007/s41347-024-00450-6

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