4.2 Article

Genetic and Environmental Influences on Different Forms of Bullying Perpetration, Bullying Victimization, and Their Co-occurrence

Journal

BEHAVIOR GENETICS
Volume 49, Issue 5, Pages 432-443

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10519-019-09968-5

Keywords

Bullying; Victimization; Bully-victims; Twins; Heritability; School

Funding

  1. Dutch Ministry of Education, Culture, and Science
  2. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research [NWO 024.001.003]
  3. Twin-family database for behavior genetics and genomics studies [NWO 480-04-004]
  4. Longitudinal data collection from teachers of Dutch twins and their siblings [NWO-481-08-011]
  5. Twin-family study of individual differences in school achievement [NWO 056-32-010]
  6. Aggression in Children: Unraveling geneenvironment interplay to inform Treatment and InterventiON strategies (EU FP7/2007-2013) [602768]
  7. NWO VENI grant [451-15-017]

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Bullying comes in different forms, yet most previous genetically-sensitive studies have not distinguished between them. Given the serious consequences and the high prevalence of bullying, it is remarkable that the aetiology of bullying and its different forms has been under-researched. We present the first study to investigate the genetic architecture of bullying perpetration, bullying victimization, and their co-occurrence for verbal, physical and relational bullying. Primary-school teachers rated 8215 twin children on bullying perpetration and bullying victimization. For each form of bullying, we investigated, through genetic structural equation modelling, the genetic and environmental influences on being a bully, a victim or both. 34% of the children were involved as bully, victim, or both. The correlation between being a bully and being a victim varied from 0.59 (relational) to 0.85 (physical). Heritability was similar to 70% for perpetration and similar to 65% for victimization, similar in girls and boys, yet both were somewhat lower for the relational form. Shared environmental influences were modest and more pronounced among girls. The correlation between being a bully and being a victim was explained mostly by genetic factors for verbal (similar to 71%) and especially physical (similar to 77%) and mostly by environmental factors for relational perpetration and victimization (similar to 60%). Genes play a large role in explaining which children are at high risk of being a victim, bully, or both. For victimization this suggests an evocative gene-environment correlation: some children are at risk of being exposed to bullying, partly due to genetically influenced traits. So, genetic influences make some children more vulnerable to become a bully, victim or both.

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