4.4 Article

The Personality Trait of Environmental Sensitivity Predicts Children's Positive Response to School-Based Antibullying Intervention

Journal

CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE
Volume 6, Issue 6, Pages 848-859

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/2167702618782194

Keywords

differential susceptibility; vantage sensitivity; internalizing symptoms; antibullying intervention; environmental sensitivity; Highly Sensitive Child scale

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Meta-analyses on the effectiveness of antibullying interventions show that average effects tend to be significant but small. Informed by the vantage sensitivity framework, the current study aimed to test in a large randomized controlled trial whether individual differences in environmental sensitivity predict treatment response to an antibullying intervention. A total of 2,042 pupils (Grades 4 and 6) were randomly assigned to a treatment or control condition. Significant intervention effects on victimization and internalizing symptoms were moderated by both environmental sensitivity and gender: Boys who scored high on sensitivity benefited significantly more than did less sensitive boys from the effects of the intervention regarding reduced victimization and internalizing symptoms. The findings are consistent with the notion of vantage sensitivity, suggesting that some individuals are disproportionately likely to respond to treatment and others are more resistant as a function of individual differences in environmental sensitivity.

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