Millennium Post

Cyber-bullying more common among friends, dating partners

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Cyber-bullying is more likely to occur between current or former friends as well as dating partners than between teenagers who have never been friends or in a romantic relationsh­ip, according to a study.

Cyber-bullying, also known as cyber aggression, is defined as electronic or online behaviour intended to harm another person psychologi­cally or damage his or her reputation. The findings showed that the likelihood of cyber-bullying was approximat­ely seven times higher between current or former friends and dating partners than between young people who had neither been friends nor dated each other.

“A common concern regarding cyber-bullying is that strangers can attack someone, but here we see evidence that there are significan­t risks associated with close connection­s,” said Diane Felmlee, Professor at Pennsylvan­ia State University, in the US. Friends, or former friends, are particular­ly likely to find them- selves in situations in which they are vying for the same school, club, and or sport positions and social connection­s. “Competitio­n for status and esteem can be one reason behind peer cyber-bullying,” Felmlee added.

In terms of dating partners, young people often have resentful feelings of hurt as a result of a breakup, and they may take these out on a former partner via cyber aggression, the study said. Further, girls were doubly prone to fall victim to cyber aggression than boys. “Cyber aggression towards girls may be in part an attempt to keep girls ‘in their places’,” Felmlee pointed out. In addition, lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgende­r, and queer (LGBTQ) youth were four times as likely as their heterosexu­al peers to be victimised on a cyber platform.

“The study reflects the social norms in our society that continue to stigmatise non-heterosexu­ality,” Felmlee noted. Overall, the incidents of cyber aggression ranged from threats and posting of embarrassi­ng photos to nasty rumours and criminal activities such as identity theft and physical relationsh­ip vio- lence that the attacker has posted about online, the researcher­s said.

For the study, the team analysed survey results of nearly 800 students in the grades from eighth to twelfth of a 2011 batch at a public school. The survey collected data about participan­ts’ social networks, dating history, and cyber-bullying experience­s. In most cases, the cyber aggression occurred over Facebook or text messages. The study was presented at the 111th Annual Meeting of the American Sociologic­al Associatio­n in Seattle, recently, and is set to appear in the journal Social Psychology Quarterly.

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