St. Thomas More College, Saskatoon, Canada.
J Interpers Violence. 2021 Feb;36(3-4):NP1810-1832NP. doi: 10.1177/0886260518756115. Epub 2018 Jan 31.
The aim of the present study was to compare recollections of sexual, physical, verbal, social, and cyber peer victimization experienced in high school in terms of depressed affect, self-esteem, and loneliness experienced in university. In all, 247 university students (70 males and 177 females; = 20.62, = 2.54) completed online measures assessing retrospective accounts of their experiences of different forms of peer victimization during high school (i.e., sexual, physical, verbal, social, and cyber) and their current psychosocial adjustment (i.e., self-esteem, depressed affect, and loneliness). Three separate hierarchical multiple regressions were conducted to determine whether different indices of negative psychosocial adjustment are more strongly predicted by experiencing sexual or nonsexual forms of peer victimization. Although many university students recalled experiencing sexual peer victimization in high school at least once at an even higher percentage than verbal and social forms of peer victimization, the results of the present study suggest that social peer victimization in high school predicts higher levels of depressed affect and loneliness in university students than sexual peer victimization experienced in high school. Surprisingly, the young adults reporting higher levels of cyber peer victimization in high school were less lonely in university. Although the hypothesized relationships between each form of peer victimization and specific indices of psychosocial functioning were not consistently supported, these findings suggest that the form of peer victimization matters and may be differentially associated with well-being in emerging adulthood. It is important that future research explores how individual characteristics may further predict varied experiences of peer victimization and the long-term impact of those experiences.
本研究旨在比较高中时期性、身体、言语、社交和网络同伴侵害的回忆,以及这些回忆与大学时期的抑郁情绪、自尊和孤独感之间的关系。共有 247 名大学生(70 名男性和 177 名女性; = 20.62, = 2.54)完成了在线测量,评估了他们在高中时期不同形式的同伴侵害经历(即性、身体、言语、社交和网络)以及他们目前的社会心理适应情况(即自尊、抑郁情绪和孤独感)。进行了三次独立的分层多重回归,以确定不同的负面社会心理适应指标是否更强烈地受到性或非性形式的同伴侵害的影响。尽管许多大学生回忆起在高中时至少经历过一次性同伴侵害,这一比例甚至高于言语和社交形式的同伴侵害,但本研究的结果表明,高中时期的社交同伴侵害比高中时期的性同伴侵害更能预测大学生的抑郁情绪和孤独感。令人惊讶的是,在高中时期报告更高水平网络同伴侵害的年轻人在大学时的孤独感较低。尽管每种同伴侵害形式与特定社会心理功能指标之间的假设关系并未得到一致支持,但这些发现表明,同伴侵害的形式很重要,并且可能与成年早期的幸福感存在差异相关。未来的研究需要探讨个体特征如何进一步预测不同的同伴侵害经历,以及这些经历的长期影响,这一点很重要。