2021
DOI: 10.1007/s42380-021-00110-w
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Cognitive Processes of Victims of Bullying

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Cited by 3 publications
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“…In our study, the avoidant personality disorder was the one with the strongest association and, thus, in contrast with the clinical control group, more than half of the patients with a history PV (12.2% vs. 60.7%, respectively) met the clinical criteria for the avoidant personality disorder. This result has not come as a surprise since bullying actually implies an aversive interpersonal circumstance that is chronically maintained and that in many cases can be in the basis of social anxieties with attitudes of interpersonal withdrawal, expectations of rejection and, in many cases, personal attributions for its occurrence [40][41][42]. Moreover, patients that had suffered from PV reported having a trusting friendship less frequently and rated their current social functioning more unfavorably which is consistent with the avoidant personality disorder.…”
Section: The Impact Of Pv In the Long-term Personality Dysfunctionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In our study, the avoidant personality disorder was the one with the strongest association and, thus, in contrast with the clinical control group, more than half of the patients with a history PV (12.2% vs. 60.7%, respectively) met the clinical criteria for the avoidant personality disorder. This result has not come as a surprise since bullying actually implies an aversive interpersonal circumstance that is chronically maintained and that in many cases can be in the basis of social anxieties with attitudes of interpersonal withdrawal, expectations of rejection and, in many cases, personal attributions for its occurrence [40][41][42]. Moreover, patients that had suffered from PV reported having a trusting friendship less frequently and rated their current social functioning more unfavorably which is consistent with the avoidant personality disorder.…”
Section: The Impact Of Pv In the Long-term Personality Dysfunctionmentioning
confidence: 99%