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Heterogeneity of adolescent bullying perpetrators : Subtypes based on victimization and peer status

Turunen Tiina; Malamut Sarah T.; Yanagida Takuya; Salmivalli Christina

Heterogeneity of adolescent bullying perpetrators : Subtypes based on victimization and peer status

Turunen Tiina
Malamut Sarah T.
Yanagida Takuya
Salmivalli Christina
Katso/Avaa
J of Research on Adolesc - 2024 - Turunen - Heterogeneity of adolescent bullying perpetrators Subtypes based on.pdf (884.1Kb)
Lataukset: 

John Wiley & Sons
doi:10.1111/jora.12986
URI
https://doi.org/10.1111/jora.12986
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Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on:
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2025082789187
Tiivistelmä
We identified different types of adolescent bullying perpetrators and nonbullies based on peer-reported bullying, victimization, and peer status (popularity, likeability, and rejection) and examined differences between bully subtypes in typical forms of bullying perpetrated. Moreover, we studied how bully subtypes differed from nonbullies with varying levels of victimization and peer status in academic and psychosocial adjustment. The study utilizes data from 10,689 adolescents (48.3% boys, mean age 14.7 years). Latent profile analysis identified three distinct subgroups of bullies: popular-liked bullies (13.5%), popular-rejected bully-victims (5.8%), and bully-victims (6.9%), and four groups on nonbullies. High-status bullies (popular-liked and popular-rejected) resembled nonbullies in many ways and had even lower social anxiety, whereas bully-victims were the most maladjusted group. Overall, popularity seems to protect adolescents from social anxiety, and victimization is related to internalizing problems. Results suggest that bullying, victimization, and peer status can be used to identify distinct subtypes of bullies.
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