Depression accounted for far more variance in suicide attempts among adolescence who were cyber bullied, than were traditionally bullied (Bauman, S., Toomey, R. B., Walker, J. L., 2013). Which means depression (as opposed to the bullying itself) accounted for a higher variance in suicide attempts in Cyberbullying.
Adolescent groups that were classified as bullies/victims of bullying showed higher negative scores on measure of health (psychological & physical) and academic performance and this result was shared by both traditional bullying and cyberbullying (Kowalski, R. M., Limber, S. P., 2013).
Bauman, S., Toomey, R. B., Walker, J. L. (2013). Associations among bullying, cyberbullying, and suicide in high school students. Journal of Adolescence, Volume 36, Pages 341-350. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.adolescence.2012.12.001.
Database (ScienceDirect)
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Refereed
Citations inside article
Bias: Does not use persuasive language, does not use sensational language, is not missing significant facts from other articles, is not in a publication/site meant to sell or advocate.
Kowalski, R. M., Limber, S. P. (2013). Psychological, Physical, and Academic Correlates of Cyberbullying and Traditional Bullying, Journal of Adolescent Health, Volume 53, Pages S13- S20. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jadohealth.2012.09.018.
Database (ScienceDirect)
Scholarly
Refereed
Citations inside article
Bias: Does not use persuasive language, does not use sensational language, is not missing significant facts from other articles, is not in a publication/site meant to sell or advocate.