Emotional warmth and cyberbullying perpetration attitudes in college students: Mediation of trait gratitude and empathy.

Based on Social Learning Theory and the General Aggression Model, this study aims to explore the relationship between parental emotional warmth and the cyberbullying perpetration attitudes of college students and the mediating roles of trait gratitude and empathy. Using the stratified cluster random...

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Main Authors: Liang Chen, Yandong Wang, Hongze Yang, Xiaohua Sun
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0235477
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spelling doaj-493a50805b5d454395892ee62c6b401b2021-03-03T21:54:23ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-01157e023547710.1371/journal.pone.0235477Emotional warmth and cyberbullying perpetration attitudes in college students: Mediation of trait gratitude and empathy.Liang ChenYandong WangHongze YangXiaohua SunBased on Social Learning Theory and the General Aggression Model, this study aims to explore the relationship between parental emotional warmth and the cyberbullying perpetration attitudes of college students and the mediating roles of trait gratitude and empathy. Using the stratified cluster random sampling method, 1198 college students (716 boys and 482 girls with an average age of 20.44 years) were tested using the subscale of the Parenting Styles Instrument, the Basic Empathy Scale, the Gratitude Questionnaire-6, and the Cyberbullying Attitude Questionnaire. Results: Emotional warmth, trait gratitude, cognitive empathy, and affective empathy all demonstrated significantly positive relationships with each other (rs from .175 to .403, ps < 0.01) and negative correlations with cyberbullying perpetration attitudes (rs from -.137 to -.306, ps < 0.01). Emotional warmth can exert an impact on cyberbullying perpetration attitudes through three fully mediating paths: the mediating roles of trait gratitude (41.91% of the total effect), cognitive empathy (14.5% of the total effect), and the chain mediating roles of trait gratitude-cognitive empathy (19.5% of the total effect). The results may have important implications for future studies to develop effective interventions for cyberbullying.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0235477
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Liang Chen
Yandong Wang
Hongze Yang
Xiaohua Sun
spellingShingle Liang Chen
Yandong Wang
Hongze Yang
Xiaohua Sun
Emotional warmth and cyberbullying perpetration attitudes in college students: Mediation of trait gratitude and empathy.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Liang Chen
Yandong Wang
Hongze Yang
Xiaohua Sun
author_sort Liang Chen
title Emotional warmth and cyberbullying perpetration attitudes in college students: Mediation of trait gratitude and empathy.
title_short Emotional warmth and cyberbullying perpetration attitudes in college students: Mediation of trait gratitude and empathy.
title_full Emotional warmth and cyberbullying perpetration attitudes in college students: Mediation of trait gratitude and empathy.
title_fullStr Emotional warmth and cyberbullying perpetration attitudes in college students: Mediation of trait gratitude and empathy.
title_full_unstemmed Emotional warmth and cyberbullying perpetration attitudes in college students: Mediation of trait gratitude and empathy.
title_sort emotional warmth and cyberbullying perpetration attitudes in college students: mediation of trait gratitude and empathy.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Based on Social Learning Theory and the General Aggression Model, this study aims to explore the relationship between parental emotional warmth and the cyberbullying perpetration attitudes of college students and the mediating roles of trait gratitude and empathy. Using the stratified cluster random sampling method, 1198 college students (716 boys and 482 girls with an average age of 20.44 years) were tested using the subscale of the Parenting Styles Instrument, the Basic Empathy Scale, the Gratitude Questionnaire-6, and the Cyberbullying Attitude Questionnaire. Results: Emotional warmth, trait gratitude, cognitive empathy, and affective empathy all demonstrated significantly positive relationships with each other (rs from .175 to .403, ps < 0.01) and negative correlations with cyberbullying perpetration attitudes (rs from -.137 to -.306, ps < 0.01). Emotional warmth can exert an impact on cyberbullying perpetration attitudes through three fully mediating paths: the mediating roles of trait gratitude (41.91% of the total effect), cognitive empathy (14.5% of the total effect), and the chain mediating roles of trait gratitude-cognitive empathy (19.5% of the total effect). The results may have important implications for future studies to develop effective interventions for cyberbullying.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0235477
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