探索关联:TikTok网络欺凌、焦虑、抑郁、生活满意度及年轻成年人的性别差异

Exploring the Nexus: TikTok cyberbullying, anxiety, depression, life satisfaction, and sex differences among young adults

Technological Forecasting and Social Change · 2026
被引 1
ABS 3

中文导读

基于253名大学生的问卷调查,研究发现TikTok上的网络欺凌通过焦虑和抑郁间接降低生活满意度,且年龄和每日使用时长有影响,但无性别差异。

Abstract

The increasing use of social media platforms such as TikTok among young adults has raised concerns about the potential associations between cyberbullying and psychological well-being and life satisfaction. Drawing on Social Cognitive Theory, which emphasises the reciprocal interaction between environmental experiences, cognitive processes, and psychological outcomes, the present study examines whether anxiety and depression function as internalising mechanisms linking cyberbullying perpetration and victimisation to life satisfaction. Using a cross-sectional survey design, 253 university students completed online questionnaires measuring cyberbullying perpetration and victimisation, anxiety, depression, and life satisfaction. Regression-based mediation analyses using bootstrapped 95% confidence intervals indicated that anxiety and depression statistically mediated the associations between cyberbullying perpetration and victimisation and life satisfaction. Significant differences in cyberbullying involvement were observed across age and time spent on TikTok, whereas no sex differences emerged. By testing indirect pathways within the context of an algorithmically curated platform, this study extends predominantly adolescent-focused cyberbullying research and provides insight into how online interpersonal adversity may shape subjective well-being among adult users. These findings emphasise the necessity of interventions that educate individuals about the psychological correlates of cyberbullying, and those that can equip users with strategies to manage anxiety and depressive symptoms related to social media use. Targeting these internalising mechanisms may assist in mitigating the impact of online interpersonal adversity on life satisfaction among adult TikTok users, and social media users more broadly. • TikTok cyberbullying is associated with reduced life satisfaction among young adults. • Anxiety and depression mediate the association between cyberbullying and life satisfaction. • Spending 3+ hours daily on TikTok significantly predicts cyberbullying perpetration. • Age is positively associated with both cyberbullying perpetration and victimisation on TikTok. • No significant sex differences in cyberbullying involvement were observed in this adult sample.

网络欺凌心理健康社交媒体生活满意度年轻成年人