Projects per year
Abstract
Peer-victimisation is associated with numerous, negative psycho-social outcomes and meta-analyses indicate that internalising difficulties are particularly salient. Given the inherently social nature of humour, and previous work supporting the association of humour with wellbeing, we investigated whether specific humour styles mediated or moderated the relationship between peer-victimisation and depressive symptomatology. Peer-reports of physical, verbal, and indirect peer-victimisation were collected for 1,241 English adolescents aged 11-13 years old. Self-reports of humour style and depression were also collected. Analyses using Structural Equation Modeling revealed no moderation by humour was evident. Verbal victimisation had the largest association with depressive symptomatology and a positive association between verbal victimisation combined with large, positive association between self-defeating humour and depressive symptomatology provides evidence for an indirect pathways via self-defeating humour use. The implications of these results for our understanding of peer-victimisation, adjustment, and humour are considered.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Publication status | Published - 6 Sept 2012 |
Keywords
- bullying
- humour styles
- peer-victimisation
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'Humour styles as moderators and mediators of the relationship between peer-victimisation and internalising'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Projects
- 1 Finished
-
Humour styles and bullying in schools
Hunter, S. C. (Principal Investigator) & Fox, C. (Research Co-investigator)
ESRC (Economic and Social Research Council)
1/08/11 → 31/10/12
Project: Research
Datasets
Research output
- 2 Article
-
Children's humor types and psychosocial adjustment
Fox, C. L., Hunter, S. C. & Jones, S. E., 31 Jan 2016, In: Personality and Individual Differences. 89, p. 86-91 5 p.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open AccessFile28 Citations (Scopus)75 Downloads (Pure) -
Humor style similarity and difference in friendship dyads
Hunter, S. C., Fox, C. L. & Jones, S. E., 1 Jan 2016, In: Journal of Adolescence. 46, 1, p. 30-37 8 p.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open AccessFile20 Citations (Scopus)83 Downloads (Pure)
Activities
- 1 Invited talk
-
Humour and young people’s involvement in bullying
Hunter, S. C. (Contributor)
30 Apr 2014Activity: Talk or presentation types › Invited talk