Digital intimate partner violence among peruvian youths : validation of an instrument and a theoretical proposal
Fecha
2018Metadatos
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The present study presents psychometric information on a new instrument,
the Digital Intimate Partner Violence Questionnaire (DIPVQ), and explores
the similitudes and differences between in-person and digital-based abuses
(those that involve the use of information and communication technologies
[ICTs]). In all, 449 Peruvian students took part in the study (X = 21.2 years;
SD = 4.3 years; 73% women). DIPVQ structure was determined by carrying out
an exploratory factor analysis (EFA) with polychoric correlation matrices and
oblique rotation. In-person violence was assessed using the Dating Violence
Questionnaire (DVQ) and self-labeling questions (e.g., feeling trapped, afraid,
and abused). Relationship satisfaction was assessed using the Perceived
Relationship Quality Components–Short Form (PRQC-SF). EFA showed a
two-scale structure for the DIPVQ: control-centered cyberabuse (N = 5; control,
monitoring, and identity theft; EAP alpha = .96) and damage-centered cyberabuse
(N = 7; unwanted sexual contents, blackmailing, and causing debts throughout
ICT; Expected-A-Posteriori alpha = .97). DIPVQ had direct relationship to
DVQ and self-labeling (p < .001; d = 0.38-1.18), and inverse to PRQC-SF
(p = .11; d = .22-.33). Behaviors such as impersonation and monitoring were
reported by more than 20% of participants. Online and offline victimization
coexist in 42% of cases, while 3.6% of aggressions happened exclusively via
ICT. DIPVQ is a valid and reliable measure of digital victimization. The controlcentered scale had a higher frequency, although the damage-centered scale had
stronger relationship to feeling afraid and abused. While previous literature has
classified online aggressions regarding their aesthetic appearance, it seems that
their functional value (control vs. hurting) could provide a better framework
for understanding these aggressions.
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