For this study, information on Who Bullies Who was collected from 54 school classes with 918 children (M age = 11) and 13,606 dyadic relations. Bullying and victimization were viewed separately from the point of view of the bully and the victim. The two perspectives were highly complementary. The probability of a bully-victim relationship was higher if the bully was more dominant than the victim, and if the victim was more vulnerable than the bully and more rejected by the class. In a bully-victim dyad, boys were more often the bullies. There was no finding of sex effect for victimization. Liking reduced and disliking increased the probability of a bully-victim relationship.</p
Research on bullying and victimization largely rests on univariate analyses and on reports from a si...
This study investigates the network mechanisms underlying the co-development of two types of negativ...
This study investigates the extent to which defending victims of bullying depends on liking and disl...
For this study, information on Who Bullies Who was collected from 54 school classes with 918 childre...
Many researchers have argued for a conceptualization of the dyad as the unit of analysis to understa...
For this study, information on Who Bullies Who was collected from 54 school classes with 918 childre...
Many researchers have argued for a conceptualization of the dyad as the unit of analysis to understa...
To understand the complex nature of bullies' acceptance and rejection, this article considered goal-...
This study investigates the network mechanisms underlying the co-development of two types of negativ...
Many studies have been aimed at defining the exact nature of bullying, identifying bullies and their...
Research on bullying and victimization largely rests on univariate analyses and on reports from a si...
Research on bullying and victimization largely rests on univariate analyses and on reports from a si...
Contains fulltext : 217548.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Previous studie...
Research on bullying and victimization largely rests on univariate analyses and on reports from a si...
This study investigates the network mechanisms underlying the co-development of two types of negativ...
This study investigates the extent to which defending victims of bullying depends on liking and disl...
For this study, information on Who Bullies Who was collected from 54 school classes with 918 childre...
Many researchers have argued for a conceptualization of the dyad as the unit of analysis to understa...
For this study, information on Who Bullies Who was collected from 54 school classes with 918 childre...
Many researchers have argued for a conceptualization of the dyad as the unit of analysis to understa...
To understand the complex nature of bullies' acceptance and rejection, this article considered goal-...
This study investigates the network mechanisms underlying the co-development of two types of negativ...
Many studies have been aimed at defining the exact nature of bullying, identifying bullies and their...
Research on bullying and victimization largely rests on univariate analyses and on reports from a si...
Research on bullying and victimization largely rests on univariate analyses and on reports from a si...
Contains fulltext : 217548.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Previous studie...
Research on bullying and victimization largely rests on univariate analyses and on reports from a si...
This study investigates the network mechanisms underlying the co-development of two types of negativ...
This study investigates the extent to which defending victims of bullying depends on liking and disl...