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JAMES : Jugend, Aktivitäten, Medien - Erhebung Schweiz

TLDR
In this article, italienisch and englisch vorhanden, vgl. www.zhaw.ch/psychologie/james.Bericht auch in franzosisch, italiisch, italienisch, and ensembles.
Abstract
Bericht auch in franzosisch, italienisch und englisch vorhanden, vgl. www.zhaw.ch/psychologie/james

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Adolescents’ Electronic Media Use at Night, Sleep Disturbance, and Depressive Symptoms in the Smartphone Age

TL;DR: Electronic media use was negatively related with sleep duration and positively with sleep difficulties, which in turn were related to depressive symptoms, and sleep difficulties were the more important mediator than sleep duration.
Journal ArticleDOI

Smartphone use and smartphone addiction among young people in Switzerland

TL;DR: This study provides the first insights into smartphone use, smartphone addiction, and predictors of smartphone addiction in young people from a European country and should be extended in further studies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Is Cyberbullying Worse than Traditional Bullying? Examining the Differential Roles of Medium, Publicity, and Anonymity for the Perceived Severity of Bullying

TL;DR: The present studies investigate the relative importance of medium (traditional vs. cyber), publicity (public vs. private), and bully’s anonymity (anonymous vs. not anonymous) for the perceived severity of hypothetical bullying scenarios among a sample of Swiss seventh- and eight-graders and suggest that the role of medium is secondary to the roles of publicity and anonymity when it comes to evaluating bullying severity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Longitudinal Risk Factors for Cyberbullying in Adolescence

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated potential longitudinal risk factors for cyberbullying, including traditional bullying, rule-breaking behaviour, cybervictirnisation, traditional victirnization, and frequency of online communication.
Journal ArticleDOI

Child sexual abuse revisited: a population-based cross-sectional study among Swiss adolescents.

TL;DR: The present study confirms the widespread prevalence of CSA via the Internet and the frequent reports of juvenile perpetrators suggest emerging trends in CSA.