Has the COVID-19 pandemic affected the susceptibility to cyberbullying in India?

Owing to the COVID-19 induced lockdown in India, most people’s internet activity surged, leading to an expected increase in the rate of cybercrimes. This research focuses on analyzing whether the factors significant in cyberbullying susceptibility changed with the lockdown. The study was conducted b...

Descripción completa

Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ojasvi Jain, Muskan Gupta, Sidh Satam, Siba Panda
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: Elsevier 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/281b3afc45944204bcc471d143a6243b
Etiquetas: Agregar Etiqueta
Sin Etiquetas, Sea el primero en etiquetar este registro!
id oai:doaj.org-article:281b3afc45944204bcc471d143a6243b
record_format dspace
spelling oai:doaj.org-article:281b3afc45944204bcc471d143a6243b2021-12-01T05:03:25ZHas the COVID-19 pandemic affected the susceptibility to cyberbullying in India?2451-958810.1016/j.chbr.2020.100029https://doaj.org/article/281b3afc45944204bcc471d143a6243b2020-08-01T00:00:00Zhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2451958820300294https://doaj.org/toc/2451-9588Owing to the COVID-19 induced lockdown in India, most people’s internet activity surged, leading to an expected increase in the rate of cybercrimes. This research focuses on analyzing whether the factors significant in cyberbullying susceptibility changed with the lockdown. The study was conducted by surveying 256 students before the pandemic, in October 2019, and 118 students during the lockdown, in June 2020. This included questions about the respondents’ demographics, online presence, experience with offline bullying, perception of other’s opinions, and the instances of cyberbullying that apply to them. The results showed factors important in both timespans, namely (i) experience with offline bullying; (ii) individuals’ perceptiveness to others’ opinions; (iii) frequency of social media posts. Additionally, in the period before lockdown, factors namely (i) tendency to interact with strangers online; (ii) whether they’ve started a relationship online (iii) hours spent on social media; were found significant. Conversely, during the lockdown, additional distinct factors namely (i) being opinionated on public platforms; (ii) preference of Instagram; (iii) preferred gaming platform; (iv) number of games played; (v) sexual orientation; (vi) age were significant. With the change in variables in the two timespans, we can conclude that the pandemic has affected our susceptibility to cyberbullying.Ojasvi JainMuskan GuptaSidh SatamSiba PandaElsevierarticleCoronavirusCyberbullying SusceptibilityStatistical InferencesData AnalysisElectronic computers. Computer scienceQA75.5-76.95PsychologyBF1-990ENComputers in Human Behavior Reports, Vol 2, Iss , Pp 100029- (2020)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic Coronavirus
Cyberbullying Susceptibility
Statistical Inferences
Data Analysis
Electronic computers. Computer science
QA75.5-76.95
Psychology
BF1-990
spellingShingle Coronavirus
Cyberbullying Susceptibility
Statistical Inferences
Data Analysis
Electronic computers. Computer science
QA75.5-76.95
Psychology
BF1-990
Ojasvi Jain
Muskan Gupta
Sidh Satam
Siba Panda
Has the COVID-19 pandemic affected the susceptibility to cyberbullying in India?
description Owing to the COVID-19 induced lockdown in India, most people’s internet activity surged, leading to an expected increase in the rate of cybercrimes. This research focuses on analyzing whether the factors significant in cyberbullying susceptibility changed with the lockdown. The study was conducted by surveying 256 students before the pandemic, in October 2019, and 118 students during the lockdown, in June 2020. This included questions about the respondents’ demographics, online presence, experience with offline bullying, perception of other’s opinions, and the instances of cyberbullying that apply to them. The results showed factors important in both timespans, namely (i) experience with offline bullying; (ii) individuals’ perceptiveness to others’ opinions; (iii) frequency of social media posts. Additionally, in the period before lockdown, factors namely (i) tendency to interact with strangers online; (ii) whether they’ve started a relationship online (iii) hours spent on social media; were found significant. Conversely, during the lockdown, additional distinct factors namely (i) being opinionated on public platforms; (ii) preference of Instagram; (iii) preferred gaming platform; (iv) number of games played; (v) sexual orientation; (vi) age were significant. With the change in variables in the two timespans, we can conclude that the pandemic has affected our susceptibility to cyberbullying.
format article
author Ojasvi Jain
Muskan Gupta
Sidh Satam
Siba Panda
author_facet Ojasvi Jain
Muskan Gupta
Sidh Satam
Siba Panda
author_sort Ojasvi Jain
title Has the COVID-19 pandemic affected the susceptibility to cyberbullying in India?
title_short Has the COVID-19 pandemic affected the susceptibility to cyberbullying in India?
title_full Has the COVID-19 pandemic affected the susceptibility to cyberbullying in India?
title_fullStr Has the COVID-19 pandemic affected the susceptibility to cyberbullying in India?
title_full_unstemmed Has the COVID-19 pandemic affected the susceptibility to cyberbullying in India?
title_sort has the covid-19 pandemic affected the susceptibility to cyberbullying in india?
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2020
url https://doaj.org/article/281b3afc45944204bcc471d143a6243b
work_keys_str_mv AT ojasvijain hasthecovid19pandemicaffectedthesusceptibilitytocyberbullyinginindia
AT muskangupta hasthecovid19pandemicaffectedthesusceptibilitytocyberbullyinginindia
AT sidhsatam hasthecovid19pandemicaffectedthesusceptibilitytocyberbullyinginindia
AT sibapanda hasthecovid19pandemicaffectedthesusceptibilitytocyberbullyinginindia
_version_ 1718405530174619648