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Are victims of bullying primarily social outcasts? Person-group dissimilarities in relational, socio-behavioral, and physical characteristics as predictors of victimization.

Tessa M L KaufmanLydia Laninga-WijnenGerine M A Lodder
Published in: Child development (2022)
Existing literature has mostly explained the occurrence of bullying victimization by individual socioemotional maladjustment. Instead, this study tested the person-group dissimilarity model (Wright et al., Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 50: 523-536, 1986) by examining whether individuals' deviation from developmentally important (relational, socio-behavioral, and physical) descriptive classroom norms predicted victimization. Adolescents (N = 1267, k = 56 classrooms; M age  = 13.2; 48.7% boys; 83.4% Dutch) provided self-reported and peer-nomination data throughout one school year (three timepoints). Results from group actor-partner interdependence models indicated that more person-group dissimilarity in relational characteristics (fewer friendships; incidence rate ratios [IRR] T2  = 0.28, IRR T3  = 0.16, fewer social media connections; IRR T3  = 0.13) and, particularly, lower disruptive behaviors (IRR T2  = 0.35, IRR T3  = 0.26) predicted victimization throughout the school year.
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